The Georgian style was popular from circa 1700 to the early 1800s, with the primary identifying features of two-storey wood frame (but sometimes brick or stone) construction with a gabled, gambrel or hipped roof, often five or six-bay wide with symmetrical door and window placement, restraint in ornamentation, and paired double chimneys.
Solid paneled window shutters were introduced during the Colonial period for the ground floor windows. Louvered shutters became popular for the windows on the second floor and were often paired with solid first floor windows in the Georgian style.
There seldom were covered porches. The doorway might be framed with pilasters and a projecting entablature above. In the Middle Atlantic region, many Georgian houses sported small 'pents' which acted as a porch roof.
The Georgian style is exemplified by the Job Mann House fronting on S. Juliana Street.