TAKING
CARE OF YOUR OLD BARN
Historic Barn Types
English
Barns
(before the 1770s to 1900s)
Vermont's early farmers built their barns based on a traditional barn design
that the original colonists brought with them from England. The basic design
remained popular for smaller barns throughout the nineteenth century. Measuring
about thirty feet by forty feet with a pair of large, hinged wagon doors
on the long side and unpainted vertical boards on the walls, the English
barn usually stood on a level site without a basement. Inside
these barns were divided into a center drive and threshing floor (onto
which the pair of doors open) with hay and grain storage on one side and
animal stables on the other.
Yankee
Barns (1820s to 1870s)
By the mid-1800s, many farmers adopted a new design for their barns
which allowed them to house up to ten cows and shifted the main entrance
to the gable end. Inside the center drive floor followed the ridge of the
roof with cow stables in a row on one side and hay storage on the other.
Usually built into a hillside so that manure could be pushed into and stored
in a basement below, these barns could be expanded by adding additional
bays to the rear. To reduce winter drafts, farmers rejected traditional
vertical board siding in favor of tighter board-and-batten, clapboard or
shingle sheathings. They soon found that
rooftop ventilators were needed for fresh air and windows for light.
Late
Bank Barns (1870s to 1900s)
Those farmers specializing in dairying soon needed space for more than
ten cows, and many built huge multi-storied bank barns to house cattle
and other livestock and to store winter forage and grain for them. At the
uphill gable end, a covered bridge or "high-drive" often provided
access for wagons to the upper hayloft. Cow stables with rows of wooden
stanchions are in the story below, with manure stored in the basement.
Most late bank barns are sheathed with clapboards
and have elaborate wooden ventilator cupolas, often topped by decorative
weathervanes.
Round
Barns (1890s to 1910s)
Although fewer farmers built round barns than other types, the distinctive
shape makes it noteworthy. Like a late bank barn, this design takes advantage
of gravity to move hay from the loft down to the cow stable and manure
to the basement. Often a silo rises through the center. The
design was meant to save labor, with all cows facing into a central feeding
point, and for a time was promoted by agricultural colleges as a progressive
way to house dairy cattle.
Ground
Stable Barns (1910s to 1950s)
After 1910 government health regulations for the production and handling
of fluid milk required new barn designs. Agricultural college experiment
stations promoted the gambrel-roofed, ground stable barn design, which
was widely adopted throughout the country. These barns housed cows on a
washable concrete floor in steel pipe stanchions at ground level. The gambrel
roof made an ample hayloft and could be erected with pre-fabricated trusses.
Ducts from steel ventilators atop the roof provided fresh air for the cows,
and long rows of small windows gave light to the stable area. A small,
milk house was usually attached to the building.
© 1995 Vermont Division for Historic Preservation and Vermont Housing and Conservation Board. All rights reserved.