Stockbroker's Tudor

Line drawing of a detached 20th-century house with mock-Tudor black and white façade. An aeroplane flies overhead and a modern (1930s) motor car stands outside
Osbert Lancaster's drawing of Stockbroker's Tudor in Pillar to Post, 1938

Stockbroker's Tudor, sometimes alternatively Stockbrokers Tudor or Stockbroker Tudor, was a term coined by the architectural historian and cartoonist Osbert Lancaster for a style of house that became popular in Britain in the first half of the 20th century, employing pastiche Tudor features on the façades of houses, before and during the development of suburban Metroland.


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