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Architectural description:
This stable is notable for its pole-barn construction, executed partially with telephone poles. It houses horses and miniature ponies. The stable stands on the west side of Painter Hill Road, located up a winding drive that runs west off the road. The barn stands on the south side of the drive and the house is located
to the west. Features include: 14 x 20; peak-roofed stable stands with its gable ends to the north and south; main elevation on north gable; angled gable hood; hip-roofed cupola with side louvers. Interior: four stalls; milled rafters; telephone pole supports.
Historical significance:
Most ground-level stable barns and free-stall dairy barns built since the 1970s have no hayloft. Instead, the roofs are supported by prefabricated wooden trusses covered with metal roofing. While most single-story truss-roofed barns in New England are constructed with concrete foundations and stud-framed walls, pole barns with open sides are becoming popular, especially for sheltering large herds of dairy cows, heifers, and beef cattle. Many of these large truss-roofed structures are free-stall barns, introduced in the late 1940s.
Information from a survey of Roxbury by Rachel Carley.
Yes
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Unknown
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14 x 20
06/30/2011
Rachel D. Carley - CH
Carley, Rachel D., Barn Stories from Roxbury Connecticut, Roxbury Historic District Commission/Town of Roxbury/CT Commission on Culture & Tourism, 2010.
Cunningham, Jan, Roxbury, A Historic and Architectural Survey, Roxbury Historic District Commission, 1996-97.
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.