Pair-house
A pair-house is a three-room house found in the US built in the 19th century by Scandinavian immigrants as an adaptation of common houses from their homeland. Commonly found in the US state of Utah, pair-houses are historically significant as being representative of ethnic diversity in an area and time that favored uniformity among followers of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. A number of pair-houses are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Background
Pair-houses are an architectural style of house based on Scandinavian tradition and most often found in early Mormon settlements in the central part of Utah. The house is defined by the existence of three nearly equal sized rooms arranged side by side with access to the outer two rooms from the main center room, which contained a central entrance door on the front and also access from the rear. The front side would usually have windows on both sides of the front door, and an additional window in each end room. A gable roof runs the length of the structure.The Fredrick Christian Sorensen House in Ephraim, Utah, built around 1850 by Danish immigrant Fredrick Christian Sorensen, is an early example of an adobe pair-house with a roof of log purlins and sawn rafters. There are many other pair-houses built by Scandinavian immigrants in Ephraim and throughout Sanpete County.
The name is a translation of the Swedish which literally means "pair-house", indicating a center room with a pair of flanking rooms. While a Swedish parstuga also has three linear rooms, the center room is narrower than the end rooms and is used as the entry and kitchen. The center room in a pair-house is the main living space in the house. The name is attributed to Swedish scholar of the University of Stockholm. The Danish name means "twin-house" and in Norway, it is the or "double house". The central-passage house originating in colonial America also has a linear three-room design, but is distinct because the center room was narrow and used only as a passageway.
The pair-house has also been characterized as a scaled-down Danish .
Origin
The design dates to the 16th century in central and northern Sweden and central and western Norway where it remained the main dwelling on larger farms into the 19th-century. Its use expanded to Denmark by the end of the 18th century, becoming common there over the next half-century. It was first an upper-class home but gradually became a common rural farmhouse for the middle-class farms and a symbol of economic progress from peasantry.Rectangular three-room dwellings with a center entrance were not unique to Scandinavia. The German Middle German house| had a central room used as a kitchen, flanked by a living area and a stable. Similar three-room structures with a central kitchen room were constructed in France, and spread from western Europe to southwestern Russia where they was introduced by German-Russian settlers, and throughout northern and eastern Europe. Elongated three-room houses are found throughout the Baltic Sea region including the Scandinavian countries, Finland, Russia, Poland, and Germany.
US distribution
Most documented pair-houses are found in Utah, but can be found elsewhere. Danish immigrants in the Great Plains primarily adopted popular American architectural styles, they also built pair-houses with neoclassical facades during the 1870s and 1880s. As in Utah, they represented economic achievement and ethnic identity.One-story, gable roofed, three room dwellings were built by German-Russians in Emmons County, North Dakota. The style has also been called the "Baltic three-room house" by some. Pair-houses have also been identified in Arizona and Idaho.
Historical significance
While some pair-houses are individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places, a collection of such houses in Utah, nonadjacent and disconnected, have been documented as the Scandinavian-American Pair-house Thematic Group. These houses span four Utah counties and represent the "multi-cultural nature of early Mormon society".They make up some of the oldest houses in Utah and few exist today that have not been significantly altered or deteriorated. Scandinavian immigrants in Utah, many of whom previously lived as peasants, were able to own land and build what they considered a middle-class style house, differing both from other types of local architecture, usually based on English styles, and their prior peasant dwellings.
Utah pair-houses, while all having the deterministic three-room layout, differed in ways such as window and chimney placement, dimension, and material.
While found throughout Utah, pair-houses are most common in "Little Scandinavia", the Sanpete-Sevier county area, where the Scandinavian immigrants were the most concentrated. Over 90% of Utah's recorded pair-house examples are located there.
Over 20,000 Scandinavians emigrated to Utah in the 19th-century where the Mormon theocracy discouraged "retention of Old World values and customs" in an attempt to build a homogeneous church following. The pair-house demonstrates that some level of ethnic diversity was tolerated.
Several pair-houses are known to have been built for or are otherwise associated with Anglo-American Mormons demonstrating popularity and practicality with non-Scandinavians.
Individual houses
The following pair-houses were identified by the Utah State Historical Society and submitted to the National Park Service/Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service for listing on the NRHP. Most were eventually listed individually; two are included in a listed historic district and three were removed from consideration at the request of the owners. Approximately thirty others were identified in the nomination but not considered worthy of listing/preservation due to significant deterioration, alteration, or demolition.Name | Approximate year built | Location | Individually NRHP Listed | Notes |
Claus Peter Andersen House | 1865 | Ephraim | 1983 | |
Lars S. Andersen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1983 | Three-room Type II, unusual for its 2-2-2 openings rather than 1-3-1. |
Andrew Barentsen House | 1875 | Fountain Green | 1983 | |
Peter Hansen House | 1880 | Manti | 1983 | |
Anders Hintze House | 1865 | Salt Lake City | 1983 | |
Jacobsen-Jensen House | 1875 | Ephraim | nom 1981 | nomination withdrawn at owner request |
Hans C. Jensen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1983 | |
Jens Jensen House | 1865 | Spring City | 1980 | within Spring City Historic District, demolished 1982 |
Rasmus Jensen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1983 | |
Martin Johnson House | 1880 | Glenwood | 1982 | |
Peter Axel Johnson House | 1876 | Monroe | 1983 | |
Christen Larsen House | 1876 | Pleasant Grove | 1987 | |
Oluf Larsen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1983 | |
Hans Ottesen House | 1870 | Manti | 1987 | |
Peter Honson House | 1875 | Spring City | 1980 | within Spring City Historic District |
Niels Mortensen House | 1875 | Ephraim | nom 1981 | nomination withdrawn at owner request |
Jens C. Nielsen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1983 | |
Andrew Petersen House | 1875 | Richfield | nom 1981 | nomination withdrawn at owner request |
Soren Simonsen House | 1880 | Monroe | 1982 | |
Dykes Sorensen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1982 | |
Fredrick C. Sorensen House | 1870 | Ephraim | 1980 | |
Thuesen-Petersen House | 1870 | Scipio | 1983 |
Also, the Annie Birch House, near Hoytsville, Utah, was built around 1875.