ows 



Photographs by the Author 



By 



Mary H. Northend 



HE two bungalows, one built for Mr. C. W. 

 Parker at Marblehead Neck, and the other 

 built for Mr. John Hays Hammond at 

 Gloucester, Mass., present examples of 

 what can be accomplished in the designing 

 and building of a bungalow which will, in 

 every respect, be appropriate for the site 

 upon which it is to be built. 



Mr. Parker's bungalow, nestling among the brambles of a 



pasture lot, and Mr. Hammond's, perched high among the 

 tops of the trees which surround its site, and overlooking 

 the sea, carry out the character of this idea. 



Mr. Parker's bungalow, which is the second of the two to 

 be illustrated herewith, is no more obtrusive than the lichens 

 on the pasture lot on which it is built. Mr. Parker has suc- 

 ceeded admirably in placing an artistic two-roomed bunga- 

 low upon a prominent and sightly location, and this is an 

 architectural feat of no small merit. 



The Massive Fireplace of the Hammond Bungalow 



