| Sarah Harvey Porter - 1908 - 330 str.
...consisted of cabins, block-houses and stockades. A range of cabins commonly formed at least one side of the fort. Divisions or partitions of logs separated...the roof being turned wholly inward. A very few of the cabins had puncheon floors; the greater part were of earth. ment under their walls. In some forts... | |
| Henry Jones Ford - 1915 - 630 str.
...wealth or poverty of the family in the articles of clothing. "The fort consisted of cabins, block houses and stockades. A range of cabins commonly formed one...puncheon floors; the greater part were earthen. The block houses were built at the angles of the fort. They projected about two feet beyond the outer walls... | |
| Mary Verhoeff - 1917 - 378 str.
...consisted of cabins, block-houses, and stockades. A range of the former commonly formed at least one side of the fort. Divisions or partitions of logs separated...ten or twelve feet high, the slope of the roof being invariably inward. "A few of these cabins had puncheon floors but the greater part were earthen. The... | |
| 1918 - 586 str.
...separated the cabins from each other. The walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high, the slopes of the roof being turned wholly inward. A very few...puncheon floors, the greater part were earthen. The block houses were built at the angles of the fort. They projected about two feet beyond the outer walls... | |
| George Arthur Cribbs - 1919 - 110 str.
...safety of the women and children as for that of the men. "The fort consisted of cabins, block houses, and stockades. A range of cabins commonly formed one...walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high, the slopes of the roof being turned wholly inward. A very few of these cabins had puncheon floors, the... | |
| Clarence Monroe Burton, William Stocking, Gordon K. Miller - 1922 - 766 str.
...were called, and his description will fit any fort of the West, as then existing. He says: "A fort consisted of cabins, blockhouses and stockades. A...the slope of the roof being turned wholly inward. The blockhouses were built at the angles of the fort. They projected about two feet beyond the outer... | |
| Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D.C.) - 1913 - 248 str.
...the cabins from each other ; very different were they from the stately homes on the lower Potomac. The walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high,...the slope of the roof being turned wholly inward. The blockhouses were built at the angles of the fort, projecting about two feet beyond the outer walls... | |
| 1918 - 916 str.
...safety of the women and children as for that of the men. "The fort consisted of cabins, block houses, and stockades. A range of cabins commonly formed one...walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high, the slopes of the roof being turned wholly inward. A very few of these cabins had puncheon floors, the... | |
| Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D.C.) - 1913 - 236 str.
...separated the cabins from each other; very different were they from the stately homes on the lower Potomac. The walls on the outside were ten or twelve feet high,...the slope of the roof being turned wholly inward. The blockhouses were built at the angles of the fort, projecting about two feet beyond the outer walls... | |
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