The Barns of Maine: Our History, Our Stories
By Don Perkins
()
About this ebook
Although humble in their function, these carefully crafted barns have shaped the landscape of Maine for centuries.
Built long before the days of plastic and plywood, the barns have survived for generations, each with a story to tell. In Bridgton, one barn offered comfort to a 16 year-old boy when his father was injured; another New Gloucester barn was so important to one family that its likeness was engraved on their headstones. Some owners said they would rather see their homes burn than their barns, and others have dedicated their lives and countless funds to restoring and preserving these buildings. From modest English to grand Victorian, Don Perkins examines the structures, origins, and evolution of Maine's barns, demonstrating the vital and precious role they play in people's lives.
Don Perkins
Don Perkins is a former carpenter who found a second career in freelance writing. He now lives on Sebago Lake and writes on everything from classic cars to ice harvesting to barns. He writes a column for the Portland Press Herald, and gives presentations and leads barn tours for historical societies.
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The Barns of Maine - Don Perkins
Virginia
INTRODUCTION
I notice them everywhere now, our barns, but it wasn’t always that way. Like many lifelong Mainers, I almost certainly took these buildings for granted as much as anybody—they were just part of my everyday. But through years of examination, I have learned to appreciate the uniqueness and understand the richness that is a barn, especially the old New England barns of Maine.
It’s hard to pinpoint exactly when it happened. The idea for this book started as a column in a local newspaper. Freelance writers often have to come up with their own material, and I was looking for something different to feature as a weekly series, something local and a bit unique. Why not barns?
As a carpenter and woodworker before becoming a writer, I knew I could draw on that experience. I have studied timber framing off and on now for twenty-plus years. Anything related to woodworking and done with hand tools has been a passion of mine since watching my grandfather apply his skills when I was young. And as a lifelong resident of Cumberland County, I knew where some of the old barns were. But that’s all I had going for me.
At first, I feared there might be precious little to write about. This whole thing could backfire. Barns?
people would say when I broached it, as if there couldn’t possibly be anything interesting about the subject. But I received the go-ahead and set out on my first prospect: a big forty-four- by eighty-four-foot New England barn from the early 1800s.
I was hoping there would be stories to tell, and I found them, like the eighty-one-year-old man with the one-hundred-foot gambrel—one of the largest barns in the state. With just three cows in this mammoth barn, he lives alone and feeds them hay religiously each and every day. And then there is the one about the man who methodically restored his own barn. The building makes a great place to store the family’s Model Ts—both father and son have one. He tells of double-planking the new floor, lining the space in between with silver coins and then joining his kids in signing their names on the inside faces of the planks. The rash of weather vane thefts in the 1980s—some of which reportedly employed helicopters—hit multiple barns and is a somewhat bizarre element I heard about often while visiting barns. And then there is the story of one farming family with a big old majestic barn beside their house. When their parents died, the children had the barn’s image laser engraved on the family headstone. And on it goes.
For many, our barns are larger than life. The New England barn is an icon of the landscape, and Maine is fortunate to have retained many of them. Barns are huge repositories in both the literal and figurative senses. Their vast spaces have been filled with animals, experience and history. One farmer may own a barn, but those who grew up nearby or pass it each day on their way to work get something from it, too. They are symbols of rural community. In fact, barns may be one of humanity’s oldest civic buildings.
That’s why I’ve chosen to call them our barns. They’re from a different time and can serve as symbols of stability in a world racked with change. Barns last for generations; they’re honest buildings, built long before the days of plastic and plywood. Highly skilled artisans constructed them from local materials, both of which have become quite rare these days.
Barns awaken our senses. Their scale and romance can be alluring. They, like old trees we may have climbed as kids, can shelter more than mere hay and animals. They can be playgrounds for the soul, just like those big trees. You can escape in a barn.
Barns serve as a hub where many aspects of our rural past emanate: immigration patterns, lumber technology, obsolete professions, the challenges of the dairy industry and local economies are some of the spokes radiating out. There is much to discover about these buildings; they’re filled with lore and will likely educate us for years to come.
For decades, barns have been largely under the radar and somewhat forgotten. Indeed, contrary to what one might think, barns are vast subjects. Much is unknown simply because they’re from a different time. This is a point to be stressed. We are revisiting and discussing subjects that were hardly ever recorded in how we think of modern teachings today. Barns, both their origins and evolution, are from an oral history, from a time when much of the populace was neither literate nor numerate. Much like the apprenticed craftsmen who built them, they are from the old days, before consistent tape measures and standardized lumber sizes.
Sadly, most of the knowledge possessed by those old craftsmen died quietly with them. Today, small numbers of enthusiasts the world over pour over these aging structures like archaeologists (I like to call them barnologists
), hoping to decipher the regional building practices that are as countless as they are mysterious. Barns are more than common farm buildings; they’re testaments to our long agrarian history and the trades associated with it.
Despite the highly technical tone that can be coupled with writings on historic building practices, this book is intended for a general audience and is not meant to be a groundbreaking review of Maine’s historic timber frame construction. It will be a departure from the paradigm of some barn books that have focused primarily on construction. These buildings have a richness that transcends this; they were worked and built by people. In this book, I will relay the words of those who have worked in our barns, as well as provide an overview of basic historic timber framing details, practices and terms found here in Maine. Along the way, the reader will find it of great benefit to consult the glossary at the back of this book for an explanation of uncommon terms regarding the many parts of a barn’s frame as well as tools and associated methods. For example, a bent is a noun in this book and refers to a frame section or timber truss within a barn’s skeletal structure. A bent runs transversely in a frame: one post rises to meet a beam, which follows to another post on the barn’s opposite side. This truss is referred to as a bent.
What puzzled me in the initial days of researching our barns is just how little has been written about them. I thought a topic as common as barns would have been thoroughly researched, but this is not the case. What’s more, finding a survey of Maine’s barns proved to be even more difficult. We have largely taken them for granted and now race to learn more before heavy snows, fire and development claim more of these majestic old farm buildings.
Many things have been discovered through the writing of this book. The fact that Maine folks are proud of their barns is certainly one of them. Barn owners are a special crowd. And it’s nice that even today, many of us still find barns in the network of our everyday experience. For me, finding barns to feature proved pretty straightforward. Many folks I associate with either own barns or know where the interesting ones are located. And owners seem to thoroughly enjoy the prospect of having their buildings celebrated. It’s clear that many of you realize you have something special, and you do.
That we still have barns in good numbers is likely due to an age-old factor of life in the Pine Tree State: we are at the end of the line in terms of the rest of the nation. The tradition of Maine’s slow progress is likely the silver lining that has preserved our barns and their surrounding environment. Moreover, Maine still has a functioning Shaker community, the last of its kind in the world. And the iconic log-drives—Maine held its last on the Kennebec River in 1976—are a nineteenth-century industrial practice that continued almost into the twenty-first century. Additionally, Southern Maine illustrates the flux of the late twentieth century perhaps better than any other part of the state. In the last thirty years, the malls and big box stores have come at a rapid pace, and suburban sprawl is certainly here, but two-hundred-year-old barns are still found in many of the shadows.
Development is but one factor threatening our barns. Farms everywhere are in decline, whether it be in Falmouth or Fairfield, simply because there are not enough members of the new generation either who want to or can farm. And heavy snow and fire knows no bounds. But thanks to rugged construction, old-growth timber and those who lovingly restore these structures, our barns have stood the test of time quite well and will no doubt continue to surprise, inspire and delight us.
CHAPTER ONE
EARLY BARNS
Traditional Structures Before the Civil War
ENGLISH BARNS
The first of the three basic generations or types of barn in Maine is the English barn.
It’s what the colonists brought with them directly from England and where the roots of the word barn derive.
With its origins in grain, specifically barley, barn
is an old English word from medieval times. It’s why barn and barley share a common spelling. According to Webster’s, the word barn is from the combination of the old English expressions for barley (bere
) and house or store (aern
). Thus, barn is a name for a barley house
or barley store.
In modern times, we may be surprised to learn the word has nothing to do with livestock whatsoever. The book Memoirs of Odd Adventures, Strange Deliverances, etc., In the Captivity of John Gyles (1736) recounts the capture and ensuing days of the garrison commander of the St. Georges River. There is a reference to a barn with nothing whatsoever to even suggest a building: When we had gathered our corn and dried it, we put some into Indian barns; that is into holes in the ground, lined and covered with bark, and then with dirt.
It appears the word has a similar history with the French, who call a barn a grange. Rather than livestock, grange
has its roots in grain storage and is from the medieval Latin word granica, which is from the Latin granum, or grain.
English barns were the first type of barn in Maine. Plain and nearly devoid of features, these barns had few if any windows or ornamentation and were nearly always detached from the farmhouse. Sketch by Philip E. Gagnon.
The placement of the main entry doors, typically under the eaves side of the building, is what determines if a barn is an English barn. Because these old barns were principally designed for grain storage and processing, the farmer wanted his barn doors (front and rear) where the wind could blow through the shortest dimension of the building. Typically located at the building’s center, these doors would open to reveal the threshing floor. Mows on either side held grain or hay.
Grain was the principal crop farmed in the early days of Maine’s frontier. Wild game, the main source of meat, was plentiful in the nearby forests. As the years progressed, livestock was often kept on one side of the main aisle, away from an English barn’s central threshing floor.
When the early farmer harvested his grain (be it barley, wheat or oats), he brought it to his English barn, where it was placed on the threshing floor and subsequently threshed (or thrashed)—that is, beaten with a flail, a tool consisting of two sticks joined by a short piece of leather or cord. The grain was beaten until its outer husk was broken, revealing the grain within. The term to separate the wheat from the chaff
has its roots directly from the winnowing practice that followed. This step was typically carried out on a windy day. The farmer gathered up his flailed (beaten) grain and chaff from the threshing floor into a wide basket or tray, or perhaps two people would cradle it in a blanket. The threshing floor was then swept clean. Standing in the middle of the threshing floor with the barn doors open wide, the farmer then tossed his mixture up toward the barn ceiling. If everything went as planned, the rush of wind slicing through the barn would carry off the lighter chaff while the heavier grain was allowed to fall back to the floor. What stopped the grain from blowing out of the barn entirely was the threshold. (Many will recognize the term threshold,
as in he carried the new bride over the threshold,
suggesting the wooden board at the base of a doorway. This is another of many terms taken directly from the history of our barns.)
MY DREAM HOUSE: FREEPORT
Jane Fox never knew she lived with a direct link to the old world, but she does. Her barn on Freeport’s Flying Point Road has its roots in medieval England. Measuring thirty-two by forty feet, it’s a classic English barn: small, with main entry doors on the eaves side and possessing few adornments. The whole barn has but four windows; there’s no fancy trim detail anywhere. It’s inside where the art lies.
Fox bought the property in 1978 and calls the homestead her dream house.
While living in Arizona some years ago, the Hampden native planned a return to Maine but wanted just the right place. She gave her realtor a specific list of criteria. I wanted a house with an attached barn and some acreage,
Fox said. A little while later, this is where we ended up.
With twenty-eight acres, Freeport elders will know this as the Randall Farm. One longtime Freeport resident told her that Flying Point Road originally went behind the barn.
They didn’t build farmhouses this far back from the road,
Fox said, gesturing to where Flying Point Road is today.
As is often the case, an exact date for the barn is unknown. Details point to an early era, likely late 1700s to early 1800s. The barn’s frame is completely hand-hewn (that is, processed by hand with axes). Even the smaller pieces, including the braces, are hewn. There are some who say a barn with hewn braces will predate the first sawmill, but this is a theory heavily influenced on locality. Not all of my visits to barns in the Pine Tree State support this. It is true that most old barns will at least have sawn bracing when the rest of the frame is hewn, so it’s worth noting when an old barn in a prominent coastal town like Freeport would exhibit a completely hand-hewn frame.
The joinery inside this Freeport English barn displays direct connections to medieval England.
Another early indicator is the presence of the English tying joint, a section of the frame where the post top, wall plate and rafter intersect. This is where the artistry of the medieval world manifests in Freeport, Maine. The English tying joint begins with a tapered or flared post (sometimes referred to as a jowled post), one that begins square at the bottom and fattens ever wider toward its top to provide the extra surface area needed for the rest of the frame’s major intersecting members. As such, the English tying joint tied
the frame together in a very effective manner. The roots of the jowled post date back to thirteenth-century England. In fact, the oldest barns left standing in the world