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GRACEFUL beauty in the dramatic treatment of the living room windows makes this house distinctive and individual, yet it is economically and conveniently arranged for everyday living and occasional entertaining. There has been provided a den with a fireplace directly behind the living room which may be used also as an extra bedroom when required. The bathroom has an adjoining dressing or powder room with a built-in vanity and linen cabinet.

All rooms are large and well planned for the placement of furniture. The breakfast room next to the kitchen is good for family meals and quick snacks and saves the housewife many steps in their preparation. It also serves the dual purpose of a butler’s pantry when serving formal meals in the dining room.


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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950


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IF YOU want a house that keeps a weather eye on comfort, consider this plan. Window walls across the front flood the rooms with winter sunshine. But during the summer, when the sun is higher in the sky, the wide overhang of the roof keeps the sunlight under control, and cross-ventilation cools the house.

On winter evenings, with the draperies snugly drawn and a brisk fire crackling in the fireplace, the living room is warm and inviting. The floor-to-ceiling brick fireplace projects between the living and dining areas to create the effect of separate rooms without sacrificing the spaciousness gained by combining the two areas.

The house has three bedrooms, but if yours is a small family, you will probably want to make a den of the one adjoining the living room.

The exterior of this house deserves special mention. By combining wood siding and brick veneer, it affords an interesting contrast in materials. And it achieves the popular long, low look by means of its flat roof and wide car port. This is a car port plus. One side of it is given over to closets, providing almost as much storage room (plus added protection for your car) as a garage — and at considerably less cost. The door from the car port into the house you'll find convenient when the weather is bad or you have packages to unload.



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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950

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A ONE-STORY house with a car port designed to serve as either a garage or covered terrace. There is an inside fireplace and an outside barbecue pit, both of which are built into the same chimney and incorporated in the design of the structure. The large living and dining room area is planned for convenience in the arrangement of furniture for serving meals and for the usual activities centered around a living room. The house includes a bedroom with adjoining bath and closet space, and a kitchen large enough for good-size cabinets and other equipment. The design is definitely streamlined, with the main portion of the house built of frame and the chimney and flower ledge of masonry. The car port has a concrete floor; the floors of the rest of the house are concrete slab covered with wood.


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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950

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The YouTube community, and the wider world of people who care deeply about places, stories, and memory, has lost something truly special. Adam The Woo, known to millions for his quiet adventures and thoughtful exploration of America’s forgotten corners, has passed away at the age of 51. His absence leaves a silence that feels unfamiliar, because for so many of us, his presence was a constant.

Adam was never just a YouTuber. He was a pioneer of a style of storytelling that existed long before algorithms dictated content. With nothing more than a camera, a backpack, and genuine curiosity, he showed us abandoned attractions, old movie locations, shuttered theme parks, roadside oddities, and small towns still holding on to their past. He didn’t rush through these places. He listened to them. And in doing so, he taught millions how to look at the world differently.

Within the YouTube community, Adam represented integrity. He proved that success did not require controversy, outrage, or spectacle. Consistency, kindness, and authenticity were enough. Many creators followed paths he helped carve, even if they never fully realized it. His influence was quiet but enormous, like a road that everyone uses but few remember who built.



What stood out just as much as his work was who he was as a man. Adam carried himself with humility, calm, and grace. He was a God-fearing man who never felt the need to perform his faith, yet lived it openly through respect, gratitude, and decency. In an online world that often feels loud and restless, Adam’s spirit felt grounded and reassuring. He made people feel welcome, whether they were longtime viewers or strangers who happened to cross his path.

One of Adam The Woo’s greatest contributions was his role in preserving vintage Americana. Through his videos, places that might have disappeared without a trace are now remembered forever. Old diners, fading signage, defunct attractions, forgotten motels — he gave them dignity. He didn’t treat them as ruins, but as chapters in an ongoing story. His videos became a living archive of American cultural memory.

For me personally, Adam meant more than inspiration — he meant encouragement. As a lover and collector of vintage Americana, there are moments when this passion can feel lonely or out of step with the modern world. Watching Adam explore, document, and genuinely care about these same things gave me strength to continue. He reminded me that preserving the past is not about nostalgia alone, but about respect, continuity, and identity.

When motivation faded, his work reignited it. When doubt crept in, his calm enthusiasm pushed it away. He validated the instinct to slow down, to notice details, to care about the worn edges and faded colors that carry stories within them.

What makes his passing even more poignant is that Adam was doing what he loved until the very end. He shared his journeys faithfully, right up to his final days. There is something deeply moving about that — a life lived in alignment with purpose, curiosity, and kindness.

Adam The Woo didn’t just show us America.
He showed us how to treat it — with patience, reverence, and heart.

His legacy lives on in every creator he inspired, every place he preserved through his lens, and every viewer who learned to see beauty in forgotten spaces. He may be gone, but the roads he walked, the stories he saved, and the spirit he shared remain.

Rest in peace, Adam.
Thank you for the miles, the memories, and the meaning.

 


A PLEASANT trend in modern home planning is the inclusion of a family living room even in homes of modest size. This casual, comfortable spot — usually a combination living room, dining room, library, den and television room — is the hub of the family’s daily activities. And it’s a boon to party-givers with children, for here the youngsters can play or do their homework, while the adults in the living room proper enjoy music, conversation or a game of cards.

The family room in the house shown here overlooks the garden. To make the most of the view, the entire back wall is of glass. A sliding glass door opens onto a covered porch that is wonderful for outdoor living and dining in the summertime and affords a protected place for the children to play in winter. Both the family room and the living room have a handsome fireplace flanked by bookshelves.

The step-saving U-shaped kitchen is at the front of the house. It has a large closet or pantry, space for a central heating unit, and a dining area at one end. Adjoining the kitchen there is a lavatory and a place for laundry equipment.

The bedroom wing, separated from the living area by closets, is quiet and private. Each bedroom is light and well ventilated. The bathroom has a linen closet and a built-in lavatory-dressing table.

To help in driveway and site planning, there are three possible locations for the garage doors.


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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950

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THE simple, dignified lines of this ranch-type house give it an air of refinement not usually associated with this basically informal style of architecture. The brick walls are ornamented only with the stone trim around the doorway and the built-in brick planting box.

The front door is sheltered and opens into a small entry which diverts traffic to the various parts of the house. The spacious living-dining room is at the rear of the house and has two window walls overlooking the garden. In addition to the dining area, there is a handy breakfast room.

The large L-shaped kitchen — which is conveniently located midway between the front and back doors — opens into a good-sized utility room, which in turn opens into the double garage and onto the back porch.

Note the spaciousness of the bedrooms. One of these rooms has two exposures, the other three. Both have plenty of wall space for good furniture arrangement.

Storage space is ample. Notice the twin sliding-door closets in the bedrooms, the linen closet in the bathroom, the large closet in the hall for miscellaneous storage, the coat closet near the entry, and the tool closet in the garage.

The house is centrally heated, but there is also a handsome fireplace in the living room.


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source: The Progressive Farmer – Distinctive Southern Homes | 1950

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