Round barn

Round barn

.A round barn is a historic barn design that could be octagonal, polygonal, or circular in plan. Numerous round barns in the United States are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Though round barns were not as popular as some other barn designs, their unique shape makes them noticeable. The years from 1880–1920 represent the height of round barn construction. Round barn construction in the United States can be divided into two distinct eras. The first, the octagonal era, spanned from 1850–1900. The second era, known as the true circular era, spanned from 1889–1936. The overlap meant that round barns of both types, polygonal and circular, were built during the period that round barns were popular in the United States. [http://www.nr.nps.gov/multiples/64500218.pdf Round and Polygonal Barns of Indiana] , (PDF), National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form, NRIS Database, National Register of Historic Places. Retrieved 8 February 2007.]

History

.] Outside of Hancock and Mount Vernon, a few scattered round barns appeared on the American landscape before the Civil War.

Despite considerable publicity of the 1826 round barn in Massachusetts, the design was not popularized until the 1880s. During this time period agricultural colleges began to push the design as they taught progressive farming methods, based on the principles of industrial efficiency. It was from 1880–1920 that round barns began were the most popular in the United States, especially in the Midwest.

The rise in popularity and the promotion of round barns occurred surrounding the new focus on efficiency. The circular shape has a greater volume-to-surface ratio than a square shaped barn. Regardless of size, this made round barns cheaper to construct than similar sized square or rectangular barns because they required less materials. The structural stability is also enhanced over that of a typical quadrilaterally shaped barn. Simplified construction lacking elaborate truss systems for the arched roof was also seen as an advantage. In the Midwest, particularly, the buildings were thought more resilient against prairie thunderstorms. [http://uitours.ncsa.uiuc.edu/landmarks/roundbarns/ Round Barns] , University of Illinois Campus Tours, University of Illinois. Retrieved 7 February 2007.] The interior layout of round barns was, at the time, promoted as more efficient, since farmers could work in a continuous direction.In the days before mechanization, labor-saving features were a big selling point.

The interest in round barns spread to California in the later 19th century and a number were built there. Santa Rosa, California is home to two well-preserved and well-known round barns." [http://ci.santa-rosa.ca.us/default.aspx?PageId=69 Fountain Grove] ," "City of Santa Rosa", 2004–2006, official site. Retrieved 16 September 2007.] One, the Fountain Grove Round Barn, is located on land that was part of the Fountain Grove spiritual commune, the Brotherhood of New Life, founded by Thomas Lake Harris around 1875. Built near the end of the 19th century, it was part of the Fountaingrove winery owned by Harris's protege, Kanawe Nagasawa, who reportedly designed the structure. Another survivor is the De Turk Round Barn on Donahue Street, and was built in the late 1870s by local settler and businessman Isaac De Turk. [http://www.nr.nps.gov/ National Register Information System] , National Register of Historic Places, "National Park Service". Retrieved 16 September 2007.]

Claims of round barn efficiency were overstated. The round barn never caught on as a standard barn, as some of those pushing the progressive, efficiency-based agricultural methods had hoped. The spread of machinery, especially with the Rural Electrification program, eliminated the advantages of labor-saving designs that were more complicated to build, and the popularity of round barns faded. Regardless, numerous round barns were constructed during the period of popularity the design enjoyed, and a large number still stand today.

Round barn era

Octagonal

The "Octagonal Era" of round barn design stretched from about 1850 until 1900. Round barns, such as Washington's, were often multi sided in their earliest incarnations. Multi-sided round barns came in a variety of polygonal shapes, including six, eight, nine, ten, twelve, fourteen and sixteen sided. Polygonal barns constructed before the advent of balloon framing tended to have interior spaces that were more rectangular than circular.

True circular

The "True Circular Era" of round barn construction spanned from 1889–1936, overlapping the octagonal era and finally dwindling out as round barns fell out of popularity. True circular round barns began to rise as improvements in construction techniques made their design more practical. As balloon framing, circular silos and truly self-supporting roofs were developed circular barns superseded polygonal structures and began to be built more and more. Despite the gains in popularity for circular barns, polygonal barns continued to be built up through the height of the True Circular Era.

End of an era

By the 1920s round barn construction had begun to decline in some locations. In Illinois the popularity behind round barns, in part due to the University of Illinois round barns, and round barn construction had tapered off considerably. Several reasons have been given for the decline in the popularity of round barn designs. The standardization of the construction industry and the resulting decline in timber framing following the American Civil War is one possible reason. Another possibility is that the mechanization of American agriculture was more suited to rectangular barn design. [http://gis.hpa.state.il.us/hargis/PDFs/201105.pdf University of Illinois Experimental Dairy Farm Historic District] , (PDF), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, HAARGIS Database, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Retrieved 19 April 2007.]

Design

[
Pete French Round Barn in Oregon, USA.] Designed in a distinctive circular shape, these barns were meant to take advantage of gravity to move hay from the loft to the cow stable below. In many cases, a silo was constructed to rise up through the round barn's center. A labor saving design, the round barn was promoted, for a time, by agricultural colleges as a progressive way to house dairy cattle. [http://www.uvm.edu/~vhnet/hpres/publ/barnb/bbhbty.html Historic Barn Types] , Taking Care of Your Old Barn, University of Vermont, Vermont Division for Historic Preservation. Retrieved 7 February 2007.]

The earliest of the round barns tend to have multiple sides, twelve or sixteen. They also tend to be wood sided while the later round barns are more often brick or glazed tile sided. The interior design of round barns shifted as well. The early round barns had cattle stanchions on the first floor with the whole of the loft used for hay and feed storage. As design progressed later barns possessed a central space which rose up from the ground level through the entire building. The cattle stanchions in this variation of round barn were arranged around a circular manger on the lower level. Above the stanchion level a circular wagon drive allowed hay to be loaded and unloaded into the central mow as the wagon circled the perimeter. The final stage of interior design in round barns included a silo through the center of the structures. These were not really added until silos became fixtures of American farms. Sometimes the central silo would project up through the roof.

Influences

It is known that prominent agricultural colleges began to promote the design technique as round barns came to prominence. However, the provider of the intital impetus is the subject of some debate. In 1848 Orson Fowler published "A Home For All: Of the Gravel Wall and Octagon Mode of Building," extoling the virtues of the octagonal shape in home construction. The book included a discussion on use of the shape in barns and other outbuildings. The book lit off a flurry of octagonal home construction, especially in the New England and Middle Atlantic states. Some researchers have linked the earliest round barn constructions with Fowler's popular book because so many of the early round barns assumed the octagonal shape.

Other historians discount Fowler's influence on the beginning of the round barn era in the United States. Lowell J. Soike asserts that Fowler did not have any direct connection with any octagonal round barns. He also pointed out that the octagon had ceased to be the basis for building constructions by the Civil War. In Indiana, for example, 219 round barns were constructed between 1850 and 1936, of those 67 were polygonal, including 17 eight sided barns built after 1900.

In the Midwest, especially in Illinois, the round barns at the University of Illinois led to an increase in the style's popularity statewide.This was due, in part, to the access to audience that the U of I's Agricultural Experiment Station has through the publication of regular "Bulletins." The "Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin" coupled with an article by H.C. Crouch touting round barns in the "Illinois Agriculturalist" led to the construction of round barns across the state. Anecdotal evidence of the impact of the University of Illinois round barns can be collected from farmers today. Stories about fathers and grandfathers recollect round barns being constructed on account of what was going on "over at the University." [http://gis.hpa.state.il.us/hargis/PDFs/201105.pdf University of Illinois Experimental Dairy Farm Historic District] , (PDF), National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, HAARGIS Database, "Illinois Historic Preservation Agency". Retrieved 16 September 2007.]

ee also

*Barn
*Lewis Round Barn
*Round Barns in Illinois Thematic Resources
*Thomas Ranck Round Barn

Notes

External links

* [http://www.thebarnjournal.org/round/efficiency.html Efficiency of the Round barn] : Kansas State Board of Agriculture, Eighteenth Biennial Report, 1911–12, pp. 139–42.
* [http://www.hancockshakervillage.org/experience/stone_barn.html Shaker Round Barn] : Official site
* [http://www.mountvernon.org/visit/plan/index.cfm/pid/593/ Sleuthing for Clues] : article covering reconstruction effort of Washington's round barn. Mount Vernon Estate and Gardens. [http://www.mountvernon.org/]


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