Ernest Flagg constructed three remarkable small stone houses on the grounds of Stone Court, his country estate. Now known as the Todt Hill Cottages, they expressed his aesthetic theories, and Flagg considered them to be of no less importance than his Singer Tower, which was the world’s tallest building when it was completed in 1901.
Wallcot, known also as House-on-the-Wall, was built in 1918-21. Also of mosaic rubblestone, but with a less picturesque design than Bowcot’s, the house consists of two rectangular sections, one-and-a-half stories high. The facade has an imposing main entrance with a wide, round-arched opening topped by a large gabled hood roof carried on enormous ornamental brackets