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Dutch
Barn Preservation Society
Dedicated
to the Study and Preservation
of New World Dutch Barns

Introduction
The New World Dutch Barn, as it has come to be known, is
one of the last physical reminders of the pre-industrial agricultural
heritage of eastern New York and New Jersey. The efficient, heavy timber
structural system adapted from Northern European precedents, reflects
the practical construction and engineering skills of the predominately
Dutch immigrants who settled the area, and their descendants. These barns
are now rapidly disappearing from our rural landscapes and are in urgent
need of increased study and preservation efforts.
Historic Legacy
Built in large numbers between 1630 and 1825, New World Dutch barns served
as all-purpose working farm buildings in a region dominated by grain farming.
These buildings represented the center of historic farm activity during
this period, providing housing for farm animals, a facility for threshing
grain, and storage for both hay and grain. Although rapidly disappearing
from the rural landscape, a few hundred Dutch barns survive in the area
originally settled by the Dutch, an area roughly corresponding to the
seventeenth century Colony of New Netherland. Concentrations of historic
Dutch barns can still be found in rural portions of the Hudson, Mohawk
and Schoharie valleys, and in northern and central New Jersey. Examples
have also been reported on Long Island, in Pennsylvania, and from the
Province of Quebec.
Rural Character
Dutch barns are different from other historic barns in their distinctive
shape, arrangement of interior space, and H-shaped structural frames which
provide a rigid core supporting the external roofing and walls. With a
little experience, searchers can identify these barns in the landscape
by their box-like shape, low side walls and broad, steep gabled roofs.
Those barns which retain their original characteristics exhibit double
wagon doors centered in the gable end, with flanking animal doors at the
corners, and wide horizontal siding. One side of the wagon door may be
divided in the Dutch fashion. Look for small holes, intended to admit
swallows, high in the gable. Although these barns often have been modified
with additions, silos, the insertion of a lower story to house dairy cows,
and new sheathing materials, the distinctive H-frames and the resulting
exterior profile remain as distinguishing characteristics.
Interior Layout
(Click
for larger view) On the interior, Dutch barns include a spacious center
aisle with a plank floor designed to accommodate unloading wagons and
to provide space for grain threshing. The center aisle is typically
spanned by three to five massive anchor beams, 20 to 30 feet in length,
which form the horizontal members of the H-frame. These beams also
once supported sheaves of grain stored on sapling poles in the loft
above. The anchor beams usually include distinctive rounded "tongues" which
protrude through the supporting columns, where they are secured by
wooden pins and wedges. Flanking side aisles provided storage and housing
for cows and draft animals. Unlike most other historic barns, the internal
structural system characteristic of Dutch barns is relatively protected
from the effects of the elements, and can often survive exterior decay
for protracted periods of time before collapsing. In summary, this
structural system, unlike any in the barns that followed, represents
an early and distinct agricultural system and culture.
Preservation Challenges
Like many other symbols of our agricultural past, Dutch barns are rapidly disappearing. Losses are resulting from the deterioration and collapse
of abandoned barns, fires, the sale and removal of historic barns in whole
or as parts for the construction of contemporary buildings and the outright
demolition of these barns due to obsolescence or new development. If the
present trend continues unchecked, few of these venerable buildings will
survive the next twenty years. (Click photo for larger view.)
As a generation, we have the responsibility to see that these rare and
significant artifacts from our agricultural heritage are conserved for
future generations to observe, understand, and appreciate. When these
barns can't be saved, it is incumbent upon us to record their presence
through maps, photographs, measured drawings and the compilation of historical
records.
The Society
The Dutch Barn Preservation Society was organized in 1985
and incorporated in 1986 by the Regents of the State of New York as a
not-for-profit organization by barn owners, historians and other concerned
individuals alarmed by the barns' rapid disappearance. Membership has
grown steadily since the Society's inception, making new preservation
initiatives possible.
The Dutch Barn Preservation Society sponsors recording projects, educational
barn tours, and publications, and is a source of technical and historical
information. Members have been instrumental in preserving and restoring
threatened barns, and are continually exploring opportunities to offer
technical advice and financial assistance.
The
Nilson Barn
The
Dutch Barn Preservation Society
c/o
The Mabee Farm Historic Site
1080 Main St. (Rt. 5S)
Rotterdam Junction,
NY 12150
Contact Us: info@dutchbarns.org
DBPS
SITE MAP

Copyright
© 2010. Dutch Barn Preservation Society. All rights reserved. All
items on the site are copyrighted. While we welcome you to use the information
provided on this web site by copying it, or downloading it, this information
is copyrighted and not to be reproduced for distribution, sale, or profit.
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