
The Chattel house is found throughout the Lesser Antilles. It derives its name from the old feudal term for movable property. The first chattel houses were the homes of plantation workers, so named by workers in Barbados. A good example of this type of dwelling is found in Cheryl S. Jorgenson's Chattel House . The Chattel houses are designed to be easily dismantled and moved. After emancipation, a plantation worker's employment was highly transient in nature, and it was less expensive to move a house than build another. They are typically raised off the ground and set on stone or concrete pillars, usually consisting of two rooms and a verandah or porch in the front of the house. Weatherboard and corrugated metal siding are popular construction materials. In old houses, the windows were shutter-like jalousies that could be opened for circulation and protected against hurricanes when closed. Today, glass windows with shutters are more typical. Porches are often trimmed with white gingerbread fretwork.
The front porches of the Chattel and Shotgun house styles as well as the traditional American home can also be attributed to th e African influence. It is clear from an exploration of these vernacular architectural styles that the homes of the West Indian islanders are heavily influenced by the cultural heritage and environment of the builders. An example of the African influenced plantation worker huts can be found in Grene Fuhring's Old County Home . Note the thatched roof and wattle and daub walls of the hut.
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Crain, Edward E. Historic Architecture in the Caribbean Islands . Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 1994. Turner, Jane, ed. Encyclopedia of Latin American & Caribbean Art . Grove Encyclopedia of the Arts of the Americas. New York: Grove's Dictionaries, Inc., 2000. |
Last Updated: 10-Aug-09