 
Preservation and
Conservation
Topics: Background for Ohio Timber Framing
- Siding and Roofing -
The Barn Frame -
Saw Mills and Sawn Timber
- Timber Framing Systems -
Barn Conservation -
Foundations and Sills -
Problems of Posts
- Repair or Replacement of Plates -
Importance of Regular Inspection and Maintenance
- Windows and Doors -
Painting -
Problems
of Siding and Roofing -
Foundations and
Basements -
New Interest in Barns -
Historic Barns Main Page
Siding and Roofing
To study historic timber barns, the simple systems used to enclose them
are a tremendous aid in seeing all of the various parts. Since barns are
typically unheated storage buildings, the enclosure of the walls is
accomplished by simply nailing boards to the exterior surface of the
frame. In Ohio these boards are much more often vertical than horizontal.
In some cases narrow strips of wood called "battens" are nailed over the
vertical seams to further weatherproof the barn. The roof is covered in a
similar fashion by either applying continuous horizontal boards referred
to as "sheathing" or narrow horizontal boards spaced several inches apart,
referred to as "skip sheathing."
In early 19th century barns the roof sheathing was covered with wooden
shakes. These "shake shingles" were split from white or red oak billets
using wedges and clubs to form sections that were then carefully "riven"
with a froe to a consistent size and thickness. By the early 20th Century,
more durable roofing was provided using "standing seam" galvanized steel
or thin slates. The steel roofing was supplied by the mills that had grown
up in the big industrial cities of the Great Lakes, while the roof slates
were transported by rail from the Vermont-New York, and Eastern
Pennsylvania quarries. These "stone shingles" were hand split from larger
quarried blocks. The use of slate in America can be traced to the colonial
period, but in Ohio its popularity was dependent on improved
transportation, first by canal and quickly thereafter, by rail freight. By
the 1880s slate had established itself as a competitive roofing material
(Stephens 1995, 246).
A heavy and durable roof material, slate’s thickness is the critical factor
in determining weight. "A modest-sized barn having thirty squares of
standard three-eights-inch slate shingles would require, at a minimum,
nine tons of roofing material (Stephens 1995, 247). Where farmers could
afford the additional expense, decorated patterns produced by different
colored slates, or dates, names, or initials were incorporated in the
roof. The pattern of decorated slate roofs shows that most of them were
erected in the northern half of the state, reflecting the greater
agricultural productivity and prosperity in that area. Many beautiful
slate roofs on Ohio barns are now over a century old and bear the date to
prove it.


|