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It is likely that the first chimney pots came over from England, but they soon became a true American tradition and were made by artisans and factories across America. “Working man” cities like Louisville, Philadelphia and Cincinnati saw mass production of small houses and apartments and in many of these places, chimney pots dotted the skyline. If you look up in these and many other cities today, you’ll still see a great many chimney pots adorning the rooftops.
As a functional addition to a house, the chimney pot was enjoying great popularity, and soon it became an important design element, as well. According to Old House Journal editor Gordon Bock (as written in a wonderful article in the January 2004 issue), chimney pots were lauded as a critical design element by one of America’s leading 19th century designers and writers, Andrew Jackson Downing.
“Downing’s affection for [chimney pots] was a natural outgrowth of his passion for Gothic Revival architecture– the style he saw as ideally suited to a modest, cozy house,” said Bock, “— and in pots he found the fitting capstone to their picturesque quality.”
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