Own a Piece of History
We offer a variety of fine historic buildings for sale for relocation and restoration. These include historic barns, houses, mills and outbuildings dating from the 18th and 19th centuries.
We document and carefully dismantle these buildings and can design them into any type of building you like with exact historic accuracy or modern interpretations.
We also offer building services or can work with your architect /designer or contractor. Please call if you have any questions, we will be glad to discuss your project.
Glenn Greek House
Circa:
1840
Origin:
Glenn, NY
Build:
Greek Revival
Size:
T-shaped
This house from the Mohawk Valley of New York dates to about 1840 and could not be a better example of the Greek Revival Period of architecture.
The floor plan can be designed many different ways and added on to. It has basically remained unaltered for nearly 200 years and would make a great two bedroom house or guest house.
Unlike a barn frame in which the timber frame is restored, this entire house: floors, doors, windows, fireplaces and all trim will be put right back in place exactly how it originally appeared.
Livingston Barn
Circa:
1780
Origin:
New York
Build:
Multi bent
Size:
28 x 38
I will call this building a “barn” but it is not like any other barn we have ever worked with. It is framed more like a Dutch house with many (11) bents. (A bent is the “H” frames each with 2 posts and horizontal beam.) But unlike a house, it has very little sign of having been lathed and plastered on the inside. Was it some kind of work shop?
I do know this: It was owned by the Livingston Family, one of the early “Patroon” families in the Hudson Valley. These few Patroon families owned millions of acres to which they brought tenant farmers to live and work. This feudal system ended in the 1840’s when the tenants revolted against the rent collectors and the Patroon families sold off much of their lands to their tenants.
This barn dates back to the 1700’s and somewhere along the line the roof was raised, but we will restore it back to its original size, which I have in these drawings at 28 feet wide by just over 38 feet long. I have never found a barn this size.
It is made of hand-hewn beams that are mostly oak and has a truss rafter system with dovetailed cross collar ties. This is not like a barn but a house. Again, it is distinctly Dutch framing with its 11 sets of bents and 10 sets of rafters. At 1,075 square feet per floor, the finished building can have two floors with 2,150 square feet or be left open with a vaulted ceiling, and have a loft area.
Whatever its future may be, it is a unique building that will make a great project!
New York Dutch Barn
Circa:
1820
Origin:
Fonda, NY
Build:
Dutch Barn
Size:
46 x 56
Dutch Barns are simply the finest barns ever built. Their history stretches back to the Medieval, pre-industrial age before barns were built for specialized uses, like dairying. This means that they had many diverse uses like: storing hay and grain in sheaves, housing livestock like cattle, oxen, horses, chickens, sheep and goats. Wagons and carriage were also stored in the barn along with harness and all the farming and horse-drawn tools, like plows and harrows.
The early New York Dutch farmers also threshed grain in them, a process in which the kernels of grain were separated from the stalks and chaff by flailing and winnowing. So, these were working buildings that farm families’ lives depended on.
The Dutch Barns of New York also have a long architectural history dating back to 11th century Holland. They are a unique architectural form known as the “basilica plan”, as the basilicas and cathedrals of medieval Europe were actually designed after the layout of these early barns. In the floor plan of a basilica or church, the central area is known as the “nave.” This word is derived from the Latin word “navis” for ship, as in our modern word, “navy.” The reason for this is that when you stand in the middle of a Dutch Barn floor and look overhead, it resembles the inside of a wooden sailing ship’s hull, with its frames and planks.
The sides of a Dutch Barn are also called the “aisles” as in the side aisles of a church or cathedral. The most prominent feature of a true Dutch Barn is the “through tenons” of the massive overhead anchor beams, which extend through the vertical arcade posts.
This barn form came to the New World when New York was first settled by the Dutch in 1624 at the founding of New Amsterdam (later renamed New York City) and Fort Orange (later renamed Albany). These early Dutch settlers brought the Dutch Barn form of architecture with them to the New World where they combined the skilled craftsmanship of the Old World with the virgin forest of the New World to create the finest barns ever built.
But the age of Dutch Barn building in America did not last long or extend beyond the Hudson and Mohawk River Valleys of New York and Northern New Jersey, making these very rare barns today. Not long after the end of the Revolutionary War new, industrialized farming methods made this Medieval barn form obsolete as English settlers from the New England states began arriving in New York, bringing with them a new form of English barn building that superseded the old, medieval Dutch form. Today there are very few of these grand barns left standing, and their massive timbers and cathedral-like space will never be seen again.
This barn we have for sale is a classic New World Dutch barn from the Mohawk River Valley of New York, an excellent example of New World Dutch Barn construction with its massive timbers.
Bombay Barn
Circa:
1830
Origin:
Bombay, NY
Build:
English
Size:
30 x 42
This barn derives its form from the English settlers of New England who after the American Revolution moved west into New York State to settle the frontier and is therefore called “English framed.” This structure features massive hand-hewn beams, wide board threshing floor and full-length 40 foot, one-piece beams.
These migrating English settlers framed their barns with very heavy timbers compared to their New England barns. This barn is largely hand-hewn and has a wide clear span of 30 feet throughout its interior, allowing for a very open living space. It also has the height for a loft.
These barns make wonderful homes all contained within the 1,200 square foot size of its 30 foot width by 40 foot length, or when the barn is used as an open kitchen/ dining/ great room, and an addition for bedrooms is added. In such additions, extra timbers can be incorporated to tie the entire home design together. See the finished barn on this web site to see what can be built from such a barn. It can be designed for many different uses to fit an addition to an existing house or be a complete house in itself, a recreation center, or commercial building. Its church-like openness is its beauty.
We can help you develop whatever size floor plan you like.
Palatine House
Circa:
1780
Origin:
Schoharie, NY
Build:
Dutch multi
Size:
17 x 30
Built in the 1700s in New York, this unique house represents a little known piece of American history: the saga of the Palatine Germans.
During the 1700s, the German and British crowns were closely related to the point where King George I, though born in Germany, became king of England. And when he did, he invited thousands of his countrymen to settle in his New York colony and make naval stores (pitch, tar, varnish) for his Royal British Navy. But this experiment went wrong from the very beginning. The Germans journeyed from the Rhine region and walked to Holland during the bitter cold winter of 1713 where British ships sent by the king picked them up. Many died during the six month Atlantic crossing by the time they reached New York.
Once in New York, they settled in the Hudson Valley upriver from New York City where their attempts to tap the pine trees failed. They then settled on the frontier in New York. If you saw our Mohawk Valley Inn episode on Restoration Road, you would have seen this Palatine house attached to the back of the inn. Actually, the house predates the 1817 inn, so the Palatine House stood alone through the 1700s. We have offered a possible design here to make a great, small house from it.
Middle Fort Barn
Circa:
1840
Origin:
Middleburg, NY
Build:
English Swing Beam
Size:
40 x 50
This heavy timbered barn is an English frame known as a swing beam or bull beam barn. (The swing beam is the huge beam I point to in the photo.) This heavy beam allowed for a clear span in the middle of the barn, allowing an ox to tread grain in a circle inside the barn while tethered to a vertical iron rod pinned in a hole located on the underside, middle of the swing beam to a hole directly below in the floor.
This barn exhibits a magnificent overhead mow space with full length, one-piece, wall and purlin plates over the four bays below. It is in very good condition, having been built around 1840.
Riley Barn
This is an unusual barn unlike any we have seen before. Dating to the 1700’s, it was owned by one of the Van Rensselaer Family. Their family history is the literally the history of upstate New York since they were one of the few “patroon” families granted huge tracts of land by the Dutch as part of a feudal land system they established in the 1600’s and which lasted until the “rent wars” of the 1800s.