Reading and writing fill in the blanks
Years ago on a trip to Newfoundland, retired traveler Jackie Jansen began documenting a strangely persistent phenomenon: front doors high above the ground. Odder still: these elevated entries had no stairs to speak of, leaving her to wonder why. It turns out there are competing theories about these unusual portals. Locals told Jansen and her husband (presumably tongue in cheek) that such “mother-in-law doors” were for ushering out in-laws, but that’s not the only tall tale going around about these quirky designs. Some have speculated that these seemingly useless secondary doors are a product of building regulations — when Newfoundland joined Canada in the late 1940s, they suddenly had to new fire regulations that required two modes of egress for houses. Following the letter of the law, the theory goes, a door was added, but no stairs, since technically that was not included in the legal .