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Monroe CountyMonroe County
Historic Preservation Board Historic Preservation Board
December 13, 2010December 13, 2010
Monroe County Historic Preservation Monroe County Historic Preservation Board of ReviewBoard of Review
Agenda – Regular Meeting Agenda – Regular Meeting Monroe County Courthouse, Meeting RoomMonroe County Courthouse, Meeting Room
December 13, 2010 – 5:30 p.m.December 13, 2010 – 5:30 p.m.
CALL TO ORDER CALL TO ORDER
ROLL CALLROLL CALL
APPROVAL OF AGENDAAPPROVAL OF AGENDA
APPROVAL OF MINUTESAPPROVAL OF MINUTES• Approval of October 18, 2010 Meeting Minutes Approval of October 18, 2010 Meeting Minutes
OLD BUSINESS OLD BUSINESS
NEW BUSINESSNEW BUSINESS• 1011-REZ-05: Historic Preservation Board of Review, Rezone to add Historic 1011-REZ-05: Historic Preservation Board of Review, Rezone to add Historic
Preservation Overlay District Zoning to Breezy Point Farm. One lot on 13 Preservation Overlay District Zoning to Breezy Point Farm. One lot on 13 acres, Located in Bean Blossom Twp., Section 32, at 8000 W. Sand College acres, Located in Bean Blossom Twp., Section 32, at 8000 W. Sand College Road. Zoned AG/RR.Road. Zoned AG/RR.
• National Trust for Historic Preservation 2011 Most Endangered Historic National Trust for Historic Preservation 2011 Most Endangered Historic Places List ApplicationsPlaces List Applications
• Member Outreach EffortsMember Outreach Efforts
1011-REZ-05: Historic Preservation Board of Review, Rezone to add Historic Preservation Overlay District Zoning to Breezy Point Farm.
One lot on 13 acres, Located in Bean Blossom Twp., Section 32, at 8000 W. Sand College Road. Zoned AG/RR.
Breezy Point Farm: Location & Aerial Photo
Coordinate System: WGS84, NAD83Data Source: MOCO Planning
Department and SDENot to Scale
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BOTTOM
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TEXAS RIDGE
HEDRICKWOODLAND
WAMPLER
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D H
ILL
WALKER
STIN
ESVI
LLE
MAIN
BOWMAN
BRIGHTO
N
MT CARMEL
LIB
ER
TY
HO
LL
OW
PRATHER
BROWN
BARR
WOLF MOUNTAIN
LEGACY
ALFRED
SAND COLLEGE
JENNER
AM
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STATE ROAD 46
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OR
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TEOMAWALNUT
WAMPLER
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HEDRICK WOODLAND
WAMPLER
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LEGEND
Location Map
Parcels
0 5,100 10,2002,550 Feet
Coordinate System: WGS84, NAD83Data Source: MOCO Planning
Department and SDENot to Scale
: ^̂
MO
ON
MT
TA
BO
R
BOTTOM
CO
UN
TY
LIN
E
TEXAS RIDGE
HEDRICKWOODLAND
WAMPLER
RE
D H
ILL
WALKER
STIN
ESVI
LLE
MAIN
BOWMAN
BRIGHTO
N
MT CARMEL
LIB
ER
TY
HO
LL
OW
PRATHER
BROWN
BARR
WOLF MOUNTAIN
LEGACY
ALFRED
SAND COLLEGE
JENNER
AM
OS
STATE ROAD 46
STA
FF
OR
D
FU
LF
OR
D
TEOMAWALNUT
WAMPLER
MO
ON
MT
TAB
OR
BOTTOM
CO
UN
TY
LIN
E
TE
XA
S R
IDG
E
HEDRICK WOODLAND
WAMPLER
MAIN
BO
WM
AN
^
LEGEND
Location Map
Parcels
0 5,100 10,2002,550 Feet
Breezy Point Farm: Local Historic Significance
•Van Buskirk family - early settlers of Monroe County
•Revolutionary Isaac Van Buskirk settled here in 1809
•Isacc’s grandson Captain David Van Buskirk was involved with county politics; he was a leader of the Company F 27th infantry during the Civil War; and at 300 lbs / 6’ 10” tall was also known as the biggest man in the Union Army
•David Van Buskirk is Patricia Powell’s great grandfather (her grandmother’s father)
Breezy Point Farm: Farmhouse
•1989 Monroe County Interim Report identifies the house on Breezy Point Farm as the John Ridge House (10010)
•Traditional I-house form with a Gothic Revival center front gable
•Built in 1882 by Bud Rogers for John Turner Ridge and Cynthia Van Buskirk Ridge (the petitioner’s grandparents) for $820.60
•The Ridges’ created the name for the property, Breezy Point Farm
Breezy Point Farm: Farmhouse
Looking at east side of house
Breezy Point Farm: Farmhouse
Looking at west side of house
Breezy Point Farm: Farmhouse
Looking at rear (north) side of house
Breezy Point Farm: Farmhouse - Additions
•Additions to the home included:
•a single story dining room and kitchen addition on the rear of the original footprint in 1891;
•a one level room, used mostly as a bedroom, added around 1918-1919;
•and the breakfast nook addition in 1977.
Room addition, 1918-1919
Breakfast nook addition, 1977
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 1 of 7
•Barn built in 1898•Barn type: Midwest Portal•Rectangular floor plan, gable roof and vertical wood timber siding.
Looking north at barn
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 2 of 7
• Out house built in 1896
Looking northeast at outhouse
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 3 of 7
• Wood shed originally built in 1882, and rebuilt in 1950
Looking southeast at woodshed
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 4 of 7
• Bank cellar built in 1887
Looking northeast at bank cellar
Looking east at bank cellar
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 5 of 7
• Concrete silo built in 1901
• Open tool shed also shown, not part of this HP Overlay designation proposal.
Looking west at silo
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 6 of 7
• Barn built in 1897• Barn type: Midwest Portal
Looking south at barn
Breezy Point Farm: Outbuildings – 7 of 7
• Drive thru corn crib built in 1919.
• Rectangular floor plan with a gable roof.
Looking southeast at crib
Breezy Point Farm: Criteria for Designation
To be identified as historic or architecturally worthy, a building, structure or place must possess one or more of the following significant attributes:
1. an association with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of County history;
2. an association with the lives of persons significant in the County's past;
3. the distinctive characteristics of a type, period or method of construction;
4. an example of the work of a master;
5. high artistic values;
6. an example of a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
7. capability of yielding information important in prehistory or history.
•The Midwest 3-portal barns have three aisles that extend through the barn, parallel to the roof ridge.
•Large hay hoods are typical features of the 3-portal barns which are used for hay storage and for feeding livestock.
Midwest Three Portal Barn
A Midwest 3-Portal BarnRush County, IN
DRAWING BY AUDRA CIURAITE
Source: DNR website (www.in.gov/dnr/historic/4253.htm)
•When several cribs are joined together under one roof and separated by an aisle, the result is the transverse crib barn.
•When the same barn form is made of dimension or saw-cut lumber, it is called a transverse frame barn.
Transverse Frame Barn Style
Source: DNR website (www.in.gov/dnr/historic/4254.htm)
A Transverse Frame BarnRush County, IN
DRAWING BY AUDRA CIURAITE
•The two-story I-house evolved from the central-passage house with two end chimneys. The addition of a second story reflected the growing prosperity of an agrarian economy. It is little wonder that the I-house is the predominant housing type in rural areas.
•Geographically, the I-house can be found from the Middle Atlantic region south to Maryland and Virginia and then west. First identified as a distinct building type during the 1930s, the I-house was the most pervasive traditional house type in Indiana, Illinois and Iowa--hence its name. Because its basic form adapted easily to the application of a variety of architectural details, the I-house persisted from the late-eighteenth to the early-twentieth centuries.
• The I-house is two stories high, one room deep and at least two rooms wide. The facade tends to be symmetrical, with a central entrance in a three- or a five-bay configuration. Building materials included log, wood frame, brick or stone. Placement of chimneys varied according to region. Sometimes they were found at each gable-end flush with the wall, on the house's exterior or paired at the center of the structure. Demands for additional space frequently necessitated the building of ells or wings at the rear of the house as well as porches.
• Despite the I-house's simplicity of form—or likely because of it—decorative details representing a variety of architectural styles were freely applied, bridging the gap between a rural, folk-derived building type and the academic, architect-designed structures found primarily in the county's urban areas.
I - House
Source: Designing Place: Architecture as Community Art in Martinsville, Indiana , c/o Morgan County Historic Preservation Society website (http://scican3.scican.net/designing_place/Folk_Vernacular/ihouse.htm)