Williamson County contact Wayne Ware (512)
863-2202
Shotgun House at 801 West Street
in Georgetown, Texas
A good and mostly unaltered
example of a Shotgun dwelling is the house located at 81 West Street.
The Shotgun House was built between 1920 and 1930. The Shotgun dwelling
acquired its name from the idea that one could fire a gun from the front
door and its bullet will pass through the house without hitting a wall.
Typically, rooms open into rooms without hallways.
In 1997, former Mayor Leo Wood and the Georgetown City Council proposed
to save this lone existing example of a Shotgun dwelling and thus create
a Black Heritage Museum. It is currently leased to the Georgetown
Cultural Citizens Memorial Association.
The plan for the Shotgun House is for it to be a living history museum".
The house will be the attraction with a showcase of life as it was once
lived by its African-American inhabitants around the turn of the
century.
The Georgetown Cultural Citizens Memorial Association has been working
with 1113 Architects of Georgetown to restore and preserve the integrity
of the Shotgun House. The roof and exterior walls of the house are
original and have been scraped, cleaned, and painted to preserve the
historic appearance of the home. New wood windows that match the
historic windows of the home have also been installed. Structural
supports have been added to the interior walls and roof bracing to
insure the structural integrity and safety of the house. The interior
walls have been cleaned and freshly painted, the original floors sanded
and refinished, and new lighting added.
click on
for larger view
Shotgun_House_at_801_West_Street.pdf
Shotgun houses
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotgun_house