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Charles E. Lewis, father of “Uncle Dana”
and grandfather of the Lewis nine, determined that he needed a
large barn with which to house and feed his 200 beef cattle and
like number of hogs. He learned of the three experimental round
barns built in about 1900 for the University of Illinois,
College of Agriculture. Being impressed with the efficiencies
of the round barn, as compared with the square or oblong structures,
but realizing he needed a barn much larger than the U. of I.
buildings, he began to envision a structure that would be much
larger than any round barn that had been built up to that time
in the Mid-West and perhaps in the entire country.
The first step
was the selection of 40 acres of timber ground from the 160 acre
“Grove Place” recently purchased from his father’s estate. Much
of the 40 acres was thick with large elm, oak, hackberry and
sugar maple trees. The next step was setting up a portable
sawmill and hiring several men to cut the trees with axes and
two-man cross-cut saws. During the fall and winter of 1911 the
logs were worked up into dimensional lumber and then carefully
piled to air dry.
Lambert Huber, a
local skilled carpenter of German ancestry, was hired as the
architect, engineer and building foreman. He had never built a
round barn but he was willing to undertake the complicated
project. The roof was to be a self-supporting dome without any
supporting structure except the outside walls. The four-section
rafters were to be reinforced at each of the joints. After the
barn was built, Mr. Huber said he lost many hours of sleep
trying to figure out the many specifications, but also how many
parts were to be built and put into place. He was heard to say
that he thought the completed barn was a total success, but the
he would never build another one.
By the summer of
1914, the lumber was sufficiently cured and construction
commenced. Ditches were dug for the poured concrete foundation
footings to support the outer circular wall. A circle 24 feet
in diameter was laid out in the center in order to accommodate
the silo and silage feeding bunk around the silo.
A stave silo 18
feet in diameter and 40 feet high was constructed out of
one-piece 40 Douglas Fir staves that were totally clear of
knots. They were the longest pieces of clear lumber Uncle Carl
Lewis had ever seen. A wooden stave silo, sheltered inside a
barn and away from weather and sun, was one of the longest
lasting and best keeper of silage of any structures known up to
that time and for many years thereafter.
The siding for
the barn was 1x12” white pine, 14 to 16 feet long and wood
shingles were of western red cedar. The shingles and siding
were the only lumber that had to be purchased. The rest came
from trees grown and sawed at the Grove. The cash outlay for
the barn was $2,000… a hefty sum in those days.
Concrete pillars
were poured into holes dug in the ground foundations of the 6 x
6” posts which supported the circular haymow constructed
completely around the silo extending out to the tip exterior
wall.
The next step was
to build the dome-shaped roof by assembling the rafters on the
mow floor, then putting them into place was a big problem. Each
rafter was at least 50 feet in length and made of very heavy
hardwood lumber. A scaffold of about 46 feet was constructed
upwards from the haymow floor and a 10 foot in diameter
laminated wooden circular ring was constructed at the
carpenter’s shop in Camp Point and placed on top of the
scaffold. Each of the rafters were to be raised somehow, but
manpower proved insufficient.
One of
grandfather’s favorite horses; namely, :Old Kit”, came to the
rescue and with an innovate series of ropes, pulleys, and a boom
pole, the horse was used for power to lift the rafters into
place. It was said that Uncle Dana provided the steady hand
that led Old Kit, as the rafters were raised, one by one. As
each rafter was raised into place, they were nailed fast to the
top ring.
As the first
three or four rafters were placed in different locations on
opposites sides, the whole affair was pretty flimsy, so all
involved hoped there would be no high winds until all of the
rafters were raised and the roof sheathing was nailed into
place. No winds came and at that point, the structure was
crowned with a 10 foot high cupola roof supported by the highest
lip of the lightening rod. It was topped off by a weather vane
of a steer said to be covered with old leaf.
A few months
before the barn was completed a group of wives of farmers
organized a pioneering club they named “The Rural Mother’s
Household Science Club,” They asked Grandfather Lewis if they
could hold a “Barn warmin’ in the new barn on Halloween as their
first major project. Each member brought four pumpkin pies and
two dozen doughnuts, and a square dance was held. Folks came
from miles around, whether invited or not. Most came by horse
and buggy, and only a few by car. The Model T had not as yet
been developed. Since there was no electricity, kerosene
lanterns were used to light the big barn. The party was a great
success. Almost eighty–five years later a “guest register” of
those who attended was discovered in the haymow on three panels
of the inside of the outer wall of the barn. Those fifty
inscribed signatures can still be seen today in the relocated
barn.
The round barn
served its purpose well for many years. Silage was thrown down
out of two sets of silo doors onto the silage bunks below, and
hay from the haymow could be forked down into hay racks lining
the inside of the outside wall. Cattle could feast on silage by
facing toward the center, then turn around and walk to the hay
racks. Hogs had special restricted openings to enter the barn
and eat corn and sleep in protected areas where the cattle were
to large to gain access.
In the late
1950’s or early 1960’s the weight of the cupola caused the roof
to start sagging and leaning like the Tower of Pisa. So it was
removed and the hole left at the top was shingled over. Time
began to take its toll. The entire roof was re-shingled, and
more recently the five Lewis brothers and cousin Jim Andrews
held a working weekend to make repairs. Part of the barn had to
be jacked up, a major foundation buttress had to be replaced
with new concrete, the window openings were covered with
Plexiglas, and a new cable was installed around the outside of
the barn, up under the eaves to the roof to prevent the barn
from further spreading. While these efforts were successful,
they could only be short-term Band-Aids and if the barn was to
continue to live for another century, the family decided to
donate the barn to the Adams County Olde Tyme Association. They
proposed moving the barn and fully restoring it on a site about
25 miles to the West near the Adams County Fir grounds.
The barn, having
been placed on the National Register of Historic Places of
August 16, 1984, was considered by both the State of Illinois
and the National Preservation groups to be of such importance,
that a grant of $150,000.00 was given to the Olde Tyme
Association by the Illinois Historical Preservation Agency for
the moving and restoration project.
Most everyone who
learned the Association believed the barn could be successfully
moved, felt that Association needed the services of a
psychiatrist. The task of now taking the barn apart and
re-erecting it seemed more impossible than its original
construction.
Early in 2000
plans were made to give the Round Barn a new and lasting
revival. A contract was awarded to a group of Amish carpenters
and the work began. Two sets of old shingles were peeled off.
Chain saws were used to cut the roof into many narrow pie-shaped
pieces. The haymow and the outside wall were dismounted and
moved to the new site. This left the silo standing like a
lonesome ghost in the middle of the old site.
The Association
contracted for a crane to pick up the entire silo and lay it
down horizontally on a flat-bed trailer. A heavy duty farm
tractor then began to pull the silo down the hill on the way our
of the Lewis Farm. As the tractor started up the hill, the silo
threatened to collapse inwardly, so the tractor stopped near a
tree and the silo was tied off by chains to the tree overnight
until the Amish could reinforce the silo’s bracing. The next
day, the tractor and silo slowly meandered over graveled country
roads to its new resting place. The State of Illinois would not
permit the silo to travel on concrete State highways.
The Amish then
started to re-erect the outside walls but this time the wind did
blow the walls down before they could be stabilized and had to
be re-erected again. When some of the first rafters also blew
down, only the most optimistic would have continued. But the
project had gone much too far to quit, and from then on the
construction went smoothly. The roof was finished off with a
new cover of shingles and a replica cupola was installed on
top. Success at Last!!
The great Round
Barn is now born again to be enjoyed by many generations to
come.
By: George J
Lewis with excerpts from Carl C Lewis’s book, “Episodes of a
Farm Boy”
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