Sixteen-Sided Barn |
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Perhaps the most interesting of all Washington's farming innovations was a nearly round barn, with 16-sides, designed specifically for thrashing wheat. This barn was reconstructed at the Pioneer Farm site in 1996 so visitors could truly understand the wonder of this invention.
Work on the 16-sided barn began in 1792. It took two years for Washington's carpenters to finish the construction. The foundation and first floor of the barn were made of brick, and the second floor, of wood planks. The barn measured 52' in diameter with a 28' central octagonal section (used for storing unthreshed wheat). A 12' wide oak threshing lane encircled the center section. Horses would run around and around within the lane, treading the grain out of the wheat. A farm worker was present to make sure that the horses did not stop running because horses do not urinate or deficate while they are running. Washington designed the flooring for the barn's treading level so that there were 1 1/2 " gaps between the floorboards. As the horses trod out the grain from the straw, the grain would fall between the gaps to the first floor, where it was gathered up and stored until being taken to the gristmill to be ground into flour. Although he was in Philadelphia serving as President at the time, Washington carefully supervised the construction of his new barn. He even calculated (correctly) that the number of bricks needed to complete the first floor would be 30,820! |
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