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  1. In the context of the 19th century, a parlor was a designated room in a house that served as a space for formal entertainment and receiving guests. It was typically located near the front entrance and considered a more formal and refined area of the house.

  2. Aug 2, 2023 · After the early 1800s, parlor rooms became a fixture in middle and upper-class American homes. They are natural gathering places for guests and families to enjoy an entertaining afternoon or evening. Since parlors reflect each family’s personality, much thought goes into furnishings and design.

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    • Setting
    • Architectural Plans For The Wilcox House
    • Interior of The House
    • The Sitting Room

    City of Meriden, Connecticut, 1875. Map reproduction courtesy of the Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center, Boston Public Library Located halfway between Hartford and New Haven, Meriden, Connecticut, was settled in 1727 and became a town in 1806. Meriden's fast flowing Quinnipiac River helped to power early endeavors, but the widespread adopti...

    Elevation for Design X, "A Norman Villa," in Samuel Sloan's Model Architect(1852, v. 1) By the 1870s, architecture had emerged as a recognized profession in the United States; however, many of the nation's first well-known architects had to study abroad, since little to no formal training was available in America. Because of the scarcity of formall...

    Left: Floorplan of the first floor of the Wilcox mansion. American Wing curatorial files. Right: Detail of the fireplace mantel Visitors entered the Wilcox house through the vestibule into the imposing main hall, with its magnificent mahogany and black walnut staircase. Off of the hall was a small reception room, parlor, sitting room, dining room, ...

    Left: View of the Renaissance Revival Room. Right: Doorway in the Renaissance Revival Room The sitting room, or rear parlor, now installed at The Met, features a large bay window set off by a columnar screen featuring two fluted Corinthian columns. The door frames and paneled dado are painted white and harmonize with the snow-white Italian marble m...

  4. Aug 21, 2023 · The Victorian Parlor. By Jennie Shurtleff. Today the word “parlor” has largely fallen out of common parlance, but in the 19th century, it was widely used as many people had a parlor in their home. The word “parlor” comes from the Anglo-Norman French word “parler,” which means “to speak.”

  5. May 19, 2006 · History: The Parlor. Mid-nineteenth-century homes included a formal parlor, sometimes described by social historians as a "sacred" space, where weddings, funerals, and other public events were held.

  6. The front parlor has the most complex architectural details: elaborately carved floor-to-ceiling paneling and chimneypiece, complex chair rail and cornice molding profiles, classically-inspired door surrounds, and delicate neo-classical ceiling ornament.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ParlourParlour - Wikipedia

    A parlour (or parlor) is a reception room or public space. In medieval Christian Europe, the "outer parlour" was the room where the monks or nuns conducted business with those outside the monastery and the "inner parlour" was used for necessary conversation between resident members.

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