BY ROCHELLE A. SHENK
Correspondent
April 30,2003 Lancaster Newspapers
If you
drive by the 1952 Herr family Homestead on Nissley road, you'll notice
that the barn is a beehive of activity. That's because the Amos Herr House
and foundation is undertaking a renovation of the barn.
John
Houston, a foundation member and the coordinator of the renovation said
the goal is to create a museum of 19th century farm life and to showcase
activities that may have taken place in the mid-to-late 1800s.
"We
have a collection of implements and artifacts dating to that time," he
said "We also have a locally made carriage that belonged to the Herr
family that has been restored and donated to us.
Eileen
Johns also has coordinated several aspects of the renovation The Herr
Family homestead, at 1756 Nissley Road, adjoins the East Hempfield
Township Municipal Building, which was designed to complement the
architectural style of the home and barn.
The
Amos Herr Homestead Foundation estimates that the barn is the same .age as
the present house‑‑circa 1850
"We
think parts of the barn came from a log house." Houston said. The bank
barn, with its stone gable ends, remains a classic example of mid-19thcentrury
Lancaster County barn architecture. Houston said that in the years since
Amos Herr died in 1987, not much was done to repair the barn. It was used
by the township mostly for storage
Restoration of the barn began about five years ago. So far, the slate roof
has been repaired; rotten timbers, broken windows, most of the doors and
all the window sashes have been replaced; the entire barn floor was
re‑concreted; repairs were made to the foundation walls; and lightning
rods have been installed.
"We do
another step as funds become available," Houston explained.
Currently the stone walls are being cleaned and repointed, some trees that
were too close to the barn were removed, and the barn is being prepared
for repainting
"We're
using contractors where necessary but we also have a lot of volunteers
working on this project;" he said. "The tree surgeon removed the trees,
and we saved same money by having our volunteers clean up the debris.”
Funds
for the renovations come from several sources.
"The
East Hempfield supervisors have really been generous to us," explained Sue
Bleil, president of the Amos Herr House Foundation. "They've donated
$20,000 to the foundation each year for the past several years The
stipulation is that those funds must be used to do some improvements on
the property."
The
foundation also received a $10,000 grant from the Ressl
er's Mill
Foundation about three years ago. The funds were used in a phase of the
barn restoration project. Funds for the project are also received through
the Amos Herr 5K Honey Run that is held in the summer and sponsored by
Dutch Gold Honey.
"We use
those funds to do the smaller projects," Bleil said.
Future
restoration work will include the addition of electric lighting, repair
and replacement of concrete in various areas, and signs and displays for a
self‑guided tour of the barn.
"We
want to show people what a barn was used for;" Bleil said. "Even though
we think of Lancaster County as a farming area, many people don't know a
lot about barns.”
Steps in the barn's restoration