HOUSE AND GARDEN 
July, 1910 
Mr. Bull’s house is a free adaptation of Dutch Colonial motives. One of the most 
charming details is the narrow trellis running around the face of the dormer win¬ 
dows, to support vines growing in the window-boxes 
A wide porch adjoins the living-room end, its 
roof carrying across the end the line of the 
“Germantown hood” 
The first floor plan. Space is, 
gained by having but the one 
staircase 
A fine broad vista is secured across the whole front of the house 
by keeping the openings wide into the hall with a window at 
either end of this axis 
The second floor plan. A surpris¬ 
ingly small hall is needed with 
a central stair-well 
The living-room finish is extremely simple, of dark stained cypress 
in mantel, ceiling beams and bookcases 
A curtain wall of brick and frame, between the heavy stone piers, 
gives the house a feature that is distinctively unique 
THE HOME OF MR. JEROME C. BULL, TUCKAHOE, N. Y. Ay mar Embury, II, architect 
