Harry (Pete) and Reba Gaskill Goulding called this house home for many years. Harry was widely known as he was comptroller of the Punta Gorda Fish Company. This structure is typical of the many built between 1887 and 1900 to provide quick and inexpensive shelter for fishermen and their families. Commonly called "dark to dusk" or "up and down" houses because a team of two carpenters could build one in a single day from sunrise to sunset. The house is constructed of 1' x 12' planks of hard pine planked vertically instead of horizontally. The cracks are coved with narrow strips of pine forming a "board and batten" siding. The inside walls are board and batten also. This construction was the dominant pre-railroad folk housing throughout most of the Southeastern United States. It was easy to build and provided a sturdy and inexpensive home for the working man. After Pete's death a new owner added to the structure.
Punta Gorda History Center Historic Buildings and and Site Records
Showing posts with label Goulding. Show all posts
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111 Chasteen Street
Being demolished after Hurricane Milton 2024. Constructed in 1951 as a one-story, Masonry Vernacular, single-family house, the structure a...

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First house in Trabue. The painting of this house now hangs in the home of Terry Runkle. Mrs. McAdow moved from Punta Gorda and gave th...
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This lovely historic home was built in 1924 as a manse for the vicar of the First Presbyterian Church, which was originally across the stree...
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This prairie style home which originally had open porches was built for Edward and Nora Yeager in 1920. Their son E. Burnett Yeager was C...