
Heading north, the houses reach back to the first decade of the Twentieth Century.

The brick gets redder, if that’s a word.

The round windows of the Romanesque begin to appear.

Those stately four-square houses, as we call them, also are there.

More complicate hipped roofs with projecting gables and intricate porches are also present.

There’s even some hints of the Queen Anne Style.

And finally, we reach where we’d left off before.
