Shotgun Houses in the U.S.

A shotgun house is a narrow rectangular residence, usually no more than about 12 feet (3.5 m) wide, with rooms arranged one behind the other and doors at each end of the house. It was the most popular style of house in the Southern United States from the end of the American Civil War (1861-65) through the 1920s, and may have originated in Haiti.

A grey shingled shotgun house with a front garden and red door in Capitol Hill, Arkansas.

A shotgun house in Capitol Hill, Arkansas.

There are many large neighborhoods in older American cities of the south which still contain a high concentration of shotgun houses today, including the Third Ward in Houston, Texas; Bywater in New Orleans, Louisiana; The Hill in St. Louis, Missouri; Portland, Butchertown, and Germantown in Louisville, Kentucky; and Cabbagetown in Atlanta, Georgia.

Click the states below to explore shotgun houses across the United States:

Alabama   Arkansas   California   Colorado   Florida   Georgia   Illinois

Indiana   Kansas   Kentucky   Louisiana   Mississippi   Missouri   Montana

New Mexico   New York   Nevada   North Carolina   Ohio    Oklahoma

Oregon   Pennsylvania.  North Carolina   South Carolina    Tennessee

Texas    Utah    Virginia    Washington    Washington DC    West Virginia    Wyoming

Give Today!

Please consider making a tax-deductible gift to the Santa Monica Conservancy. It is our goal to remain here for everyone, now and in the future, as the only Santa Monica organization that actively works to preserve historic sites and assist in their adaptive reuse. Thank you for supporting preservation!

Orange link button reads, donate.