n/a
Architectural description:
This is a 1 1/2-story gable-entry tobacco shed. The ridge-line of the shed runs roughly east-west and is perpendicular to this portion of Barber Hill Road, which runs north-south. The tobacco shed has eleven bents and three aisles. The shed has the standard tobacco shed arrangement; one or two pairs (in this case one pair) of hinged swinging doors in the gable-facades and a ventilation system in the eave-facades. The ventilation system for the shed is vertical siding in which every second board is hinged at the top and tilted out at the bottom by means of a horizontal cleat, that lifts many boards at once, and metal prop hooks to hold the boards in place. The roof of the shed is covered with asphalt shingles.
Historical significance:
The tobacco barn, or shed as it is called in the Connecticut River Valley, is one of the most distinctive of the single-crop barns. They tend to be long, low windowless buildings with pitched roofs. They are characterized by vented sides to regulate air flow and allow harvested tobacco to cure at the appropriate rate. Derived initially from the design of the English barn, the shed is composed of a fixed skeleton consisting of two- or three-aisle bents repeated at intervals of 15 feet to the desired length. The wood-framed bents sit on piers of stone or concrete and the bents are connected by girts and diagonal braces. Typically there are two doors at each end, making the shed a “drive-through,” although some sheds are accessed through doors on the sides. The interior structural framework serves a second purpose in addition to supporting the walls and roof of the building; it provides a framework for the rails used to hang the tobacco as it cures.
Tobacco shed ventilation is accomplished using one of four different systems (more than one method may be utilized in a single shed):
a) Vertical siding in which every second board is hinged at the top and tilted out at the bottom by means of a horizontal cleat, that lifts many boards at once, and metal prop hooks to hold the boards in place;
b) Vertical siding in which alternate boards are hinged along the sides to open like tall narrow doors;
c) Less commonly, horizontal siding in which alternate boards are hinged along the top edge and open like long narrow awnings;
d) A series of large doors along one of the long sides of the building with the other sides of the building vented by one or more of the other methods.
Tobacco shed
The shed is to the south of of the house it is associated with. The ridge-line of the house is parallel with the ridge-line of the barn. The 9.75 site is a corner lot at the intersection of Barber Hill Road to the west and Griffin Road to the north. The shed is at the southwest corner of the lot. To the north of the tobacco shed is a wide, low pitch-roofed shed. Behind and to the east of the house is a cluster of outbuildings. To the east of the shed is a tract of open space, followed by dense woodland. The area surrounding the site is residential, active agriculture, open space and woodland.
m/b/p = 42 73 001
n/a
4800 S.F.
06/29/2010
Todd Levine, reviewed by the Connecticut Trust
Photographs and field notes by John Harmon.
Map of East Windsor, CT, retrieved on August 28, 2010 from website www.zillow.com.
O’Gorman, James F., Connecticut Valley Vernacular: the Vanishing Landscape and Architecture of the New England Tobacco Fields, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002, 144 pages.
Sexton, James, PhD; Survey Narrative of the Connecticut Barn, Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation, Hamden, CT, 2005, http://www.connecticutbarns.org/history.
Visser, Thomas D.,Field Guide to New England Barns and Farm Buildings, University Press of New England, 1997, 213 pages.
The Capitol Region Council of Governments website. http://www.crcog.org/gissearch/
eQuality Valuation Services, LLC Database. http://www.eastwindsor-ct.gov/Public_Documents/EWindsorCT_Assessor/index.