4pane

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Historical NYS antique red barn with barn roof additions Royalty Free Stock Photo
Historic old red barn illuminated by setting winter sun Royalty Free Stock Photo
Vintage historic red timberframe barn showing joined roofs Royalty Free Stock Photo
Historic red brick building left in ruins near ErieCanal and CayugaLake Royalty Free Stock Photo
Historic red brick building with round window and wood bell cupola tower Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
Historic antique red barn after winter snowfall
Historic brick building in overgrown brush visible in winter NYS FingerLakes Royalty Free Stock Photo
Antique vintage red gable barn with sliding doors and dormer roof windows Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
Historic red brick building in overgrown brush visible in winter near Evans Corners Tyre NYS Royalty Free Stock Photo
Historic brick ruins building in Evans Corners on Armitage Road Tyre NYS FingerLakes Royalty Free Stock Photo
Historic brick building with wood bell cupola in NYS CayugaLake FingerLakes Royalty Free Stock Photo
New York State has regionally distinct barn styles, agriculture, thresher, dairy barns, that sat on stone piers or a fieldstone foundation—based on Dutch, English and German forms brought over by European immigrants—that relate to the types of farm animals kept and crops grown. The region’s agricultural history began over 200 years ago with the settlement of the Military Tract by soldiers who were compensated for their Revolutionary War military service with 600 acres of wilderness. Full of old-growth oak, pine, maple and basswood, these trees were cut down and used to build farmhouses and barns—preferably near a reliable source of potable water from a creek or a hand-dug well—while simultaneously clearing the land to grow crops for farm animals and families. The central upstate region traces its barn lineage to the New England families who settled the area in the late 18th-century. They built single-story English or “Yankee” barns that were typically rectilinear, longer than they were wide. Doors—once located on the gable or narrow end of a barn—shifted to the long side of a barn with the 19th-century invention of the roller-door used on railroad cars.


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