52 
House & Garden 
The gateway below, de¬ 
signed for his own garden 
by Thomas Hastings, is a 
hooded structure of the 
Georgian period but is 
colorfully detailed in the 
Italian spirit 
A bridle-path gateway with gabled, 
picturesque piers laid up of brick, 
stone, stucco, and slate, and operated 
by long handled levers fixed at about 
18 hands height 
A small oaken gate, adze-hewn and 
pegged, harmonized delightfully with 
the window trim of oak, handled in 
the same manner, on a house in a 
British vernacular style 
The charm and effective¬ 
ness of inexpensive ma¬ 
terials unpretentiously 
arranged: a hawthorn 
hedge, a fence, and a 
rose-hung gateway 
A stone arch in the gar¬ 
den wall filled by a 
white, grilled door helps 
to achieve an air of se¬ 
clusion and affords a nice 
contrast in inaterials 
In the enclosed terrace of 
the house of B. B Bryan, 
at Great Neck, L. /., de¬ 
signed by Palter son- 
King, a Georgian gate 
extends a graceful wel¬ 
come 
' 
