Our barn's granary. The newly discovered name is on the door behind the black cabinet. |
I'd long wondered about the history of our farm. We've dug up a few artifacts, most of which add to the mystery rather than answer it.
The fields and soil around the house have yielded old hand forged horse shoes, horse bits, a sleigh bell, and pieces of wagons and farm equipment. Cleaning the barn when we first moved in, I found an ancient tin of percussion caps, definitely pre-dating the modern resurgence of muzzle-loading firearms, and imagined it to have been left there by a farmer who used his civil-war surplus rifle for slaughtering livestock.
We knew this farm was homesteaded sometime between the 1858 and 1872, as it first appears on the 1872 map. The original barn is of a Pennsylvania Dutch (German) style, a two story bank barn. Had the person who built it come from Pennsylvania, I wondered? It's an excellent design, and a perfect fit for the type of farming I enjoy. You can drive into the hay loft upstairs for unloading via the overhead trolley, and then toss the hay downstairs to the livestock accommodations. An overhang on the downhill side provides a nice covered outdoor loafing area
I went online with the name I found on the granary door, and soon found a slew of information about the man and family who homesteaded our farm -- Benjamin Artley, originally from Hughesville, Pennsylvania. He was born on September 7th, 1840. Now I know how our Pennsylvania style barn came to Michigan.
The oldest of 12 children, Benjamin was a civil war veteran (perhaps lending credence to my theory of the tin of percussion caps found in our barn) who signed on with a Pennsylvania regiment. He was listed upon one military document as having the disability of "chronic diarrhea, and piles" (hemorroids). This was the dysentery which killed 95,000 of his fellow soldiers. Two of his younger brothers enlisted, one of whom survived the war and one whom was killed at Gettysburg.
After the war, he moved west to Michigan, where other family members from the same part of Pennsylvania had become well established. He married Eliza Artley in the nearby town of Constantine in 1870, whom had three daughters and was a widow of another civil war soldier killed in January of 1865 near the end of the war. Eliza's maiden name was Wilson, and it appears as if her first marriage was to one of Benjamin's Artley relatives, so she was already an Artley when they married. They had three boys together, all born while living in this house. Benjamin was listed as a carpenter as well as a farmer, and presumably built this house himself, likely with the aid of his younger brother George (also a carpenter) who also lived here at the time of the 1880 census.
The original home was 700 square feet, two stories, and four bedrooms for eight people. Though they built a fantastic barn, they skimped a bit on the house. I discovered that they only used sheathing on the west side of the house which faces the prevailing winds. The rest of the exterior had clap-boards nailed directly to the oak studs.
The original home was 700 square feet, two stories, and four bedrooms for eight people. Though they built a fantastic barn, they skimped a bit on the house. I discovered that they only used sheathing on the west side of the house which faces the prevailing winds. The rest of the exterior had clap-boards nailed directly to the oak studs.
Benjamin died in 1908 of hepatitis at age 68. His wife appears to have moved in with her daughter Hattie in Kalamazoo, where she died in 1924 at age 84 of liver and stomach ailments. Hattie later died from smoke inhalation during a fire in that same home in 1940. The other two daughters appear to have moved to Iowa.
4 comments:
Fascinating background. And, I'm most envious of the barn. It is something I have observed as well. That farms often spent more effort on their barns than on their dwellings. Well placed sense of priorities, right? If you can't eat or protect your livestock then not much else matters.
We have found some evidence of previous "visitors". Our farmland was settled relatively late. I wrote about it some years back (http://www.wingedelmfarm.com/blog/2013/04/21/evidence-of-our-passing/). Perhaps the most intriguing is that John Muir more than likely walked our valley on his way to the Florida Keys in the years after the Civil War.
Cheers,
Brian
Thanks for pointing out the blog entry on your own farm's history -- it's fun to read what others have found as well. I'm guessing you've also read Muir's books, which I really enjoyed reading.
Yesterday I did a little more research, finding that Benjamin Artley's son Joseph returned from the Battle Creek area to the farm in 1930, which leads me to believe that we are the third (European, anyway) family to own it.
David,
Your blog is really interesting, I love the barn pics. I grew up not far from you in Bristol Indiana.
Frontier Carpenter -- Looks like you're doing some amazing stuff yourself! Let me know if you're ever back on the home turf; would love to buy you a beer & learn more about your projects. Tin-smithing has been an interest of mine that I have yet to pursue, and it looks like you've made some great stuff with that!
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