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This raised one-story clapboard house shows the evolution of the center-hall double-pile planter’s cottage after the Civil War, when low-sloped hipped and even pyramidal roofs supplanted the side-gabled form of the antebellum period. Stylish Italianate trim adorns the full undercut gallery, which is supported on wooden pierced piers, a common detail in Vicksburg during the 1870s. Probably meant to mimic decorative ironwork, the piers are composed of two 2 × 4 wooden posts connected with open panels or scrollwork and are often further decorated with lacy brackets, a jigsawn balustrade, and a dentiled or modillioned cornice, as seen next door on the two-story brick side-hall town house at 1208 Adams, built c. 1870.