Preservation of Historic
Barns
Understanding Barns and Their History
Historic barns are preserved for a number of reasons. Some are so well
built that they remain useful even after a hundred years or more. Many
others are intimately connected with the families who built them and the
surrounding communities. Others reflect developments in agricultural science
or regional building types.
Before restoring a historic barn or rehabilitating it for a new use,
an owner should study the building thoroughly. This process involves finding
out when the barn was built, who built it, and why. It means understanding
how the building was changed through the years. It means assessing the
condition of the barn, and understanding its components. This process has
as its end an appreciation of the building's historic character, that is,
the sense of time and place associated with it. It is this physical presence
of the past that gives historic buildings their significance.
To assess the historic character of a barn, an owner should study old
photographs, family records, deeds, insurance papers, and other documents
that might reveal the building's appearance and history. Neighbors and
former owners are often important sources of information. Local libraries,
historical societies and preservation organizations are additional sources
of help.
As part of this overall evaluation, the following elements should be
assessed for their contributions to the property. They are the principal
tangible aspects of a barn's historic character, and should be respected
in any work done on it.
A barn is integral with its setting--orchards, ponds, fencing, streams, country roads, windmills, and silos. Photo: Jack E. Boucher, HABS Collection, NPS.
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Setting. Setting is one of the primary factors contributing to the historic
character of a barn. Farmers built barns in order to help
them work the land; barns belong on farms, where they can be seen in relation
to the surrounding fields and other structures in the farm complex. A barn
crowded by suburbs is not a barn in the same sense as is a barn clustered
with other farm buildings, or standing alone against a backdrop of cornfields.
Hence, the preservation of barns should not be divorced from the preservation
of the setting: farms and farmland, ranches and range, orchards, ponds,
fields, streams and country roads.
Other important elements of setting include fences, stone walls, roads,
paths, barnyards, corrals, and ancillary structures such as windmills and
silos. (Silos, indeed, have become so closely associated with barns as
nearly to have lost their "separate" identities.) These features
help place the building in the larger agricultural context, relating it
to its purpose in the overall rural setting.