208 
AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 
June, 1912 
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The living-room portion of the main room of the Coit camp has a great boulder fireplace at one end, giving it a sense of permanency 
from the sun for the broad entrance steps, which serve as a 
sort of open air veranda, where members of the family fre- 
quently congregate. Windows at the rear of the ell render 
the bedrooms light and airy, and the end chamber boasts 
in addition a large, casement window at the side. 
Next to the bedroom ell, and built at right angles to it, is 
the main portion of the camp, lighted on all sides by quaint 
diamond-paned windows of the casement type that swing 
outward. At the front is the combination living-room and 
dining-room, overlooking a great pine grove, and character- 
ized by a spacious fireplace built of fieldstones secured on 
the estate, and beyond is the kitchen, the servants’ dining- 
porch, with running water at one side, and the servants’ 
sleeping apartments, and toilet. 
The main room is most attractive in its wood finish, the 
soft brown of the stain harmonizing admirably with the 
gray of the fireplace and the deep green of the nearby 
woods, of which it seems an intimate part. Built-in shelves 
for books and other things are features of the living-room 
portion, while in the dining-room division a built-in cupboard 
for china, adds distinction. 
The kitchen is abundantly supplied with shelves conven- 
iently grouped about, and the servants’ quarters are as com- 
fortable in their arrangement as the main apartments. 
One of the main bunkrooms 
An outside bunkroom 
