y MICHAEL HARRA, IN AMERICA., as in many coun. tries, the drama and the pathos of the nation's heritage is often contained durably in thearchitec- ture. Thomas Tileston Waterman, author of "The Dwellings of Colo- nial America," points out that "a dozen European nations and cul- tural groups contributed their tra- ditional methods of building. These were modified to meet vary- ing demands of American climate and the living conditions of the ever-expanding American frontier. "The various traditions influ- enced one another as the colonials, moved westward from the coast and southward down the slopes and valleys of the Appalachians." In a word, they blended. And thus America did not really have a hodge-podge of English, Swed- ish, German, and Dutch architec- ture, but rather a combination-- a truly American architecture-- with a charm all its own. Perhaps the most stately and refined of American houses were in the southern colonies-below what was later the Mason-Dixon line. The lavish elegance and com- fort which they exude are very much a part of the South, and it is hard to.imagine a South with- out them. And yet lavish or even solid buildings were the farthest thing from the dwellings which existed at the outset. Captain John Smith, relates of the pioneer Jamestown colony (1607-Virginia) that "the tents were rotten and the cabins no better," and the captain of the First Supply in 1608 reported to Queen Elizabeth that the colonists lived in "shambling cabins and holes in the ground." Of this primitive settlement, however, little but legend remains. Perhaps the oldest of the houses in the area of the colony today is the Brinson House on Fresh Pond in Princess Anne Count, Maryland. Dating late in the 17th century, it is a frame building, one and a half stories high. It has but one room, with a fireplace at the far end. The sidewalls are flanked with a win- dow apiece, and a narrow stair by the fireplace ascends into a small alcove between the chimney and the wall. And so, while this house is a marked improvement over Jamestown, it doesn't even ap- proach the pictured houses of the South. The Growth of Colonial Architecture Fairfax House, Alexandria, Virginia, is typical of early Southern architecture. Mount Pleasant, Philadelphia. This Georgian house is more in the local manner than Cliveden. 0 l}} 1 ,t { r i i R i The Old City Tavern at Alexandria, Virginia. A Philadelphia-style doorway. t Michael Harrah is an a4- sistant night editor on The Daily and is a sophomore in the literary college. McIntyre garrison house at York, Maine. Built about 1670, it was constructed with an eye toward defense against Indian attacks. Cliveden, Germantown, Pennsylvania. The coursed stone work shows the colonidl phase of the style.