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Oconaluftee Mountain Farm Museum
Item 7 of 9
This is a contributing entry for Oconaluftee Mountain Farm Museum and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.
This barn was from the Enloe-Floyd farm which was located where the farm museum is currently located. The barn only had to be moved 200 yards from its original position. A barn was the central building on a farm and housed livestock along with other tools used around the farm.

Original Barn

Wood, Monochrome, Landscape, Monochrome photography

Original Barn

Wood, House, Log cabin, Monochrome photography

Girl feeding goat inside the barn in 1969

Dress, Working animal, Snapshot, Vintage clothing

Present-Day Barn

Wood, Grass, Rural area, Land lot

A barn is one of the most important and symbolic buildings located on a farm. This particular barn was from the Enloe-Floyd farm which was located approximately 200 yards from its current location. Part of the reason a barn was so important was the versatility of the building and what was housed within it. Typically mountain farms used barns to house their livestock, especially in the colder months. Above the stables where the animals slept was storage of the food that was eaten throughout the year. Barns also offered a sheltered area for other endeavors, from woodworking to equipment repair. It was also where most of the tools that were used on the farm were stored. These tools ranged from hoes and harrows to plows and wagons. The size of a barn depended on a variety of factors. These included the size and location of the farm and consequently the prosperity of the farm. If a farm was located in a broad, fertile valley, they were generally able to have more livestock and produce a larger number of crops. Therefore larger farms had larger barns. Conversely, as previously seen with the corn crib and gear shed, if a farm was small it might not have had a barn but a smaller building that housed the various tools that were needed. As sawmill-produced lumber became more available, more people began to build frame homes with these materials. However, many farm buildings including barns were still made with logs. This was for a number of reasons which included the fact that there was such an abundance of natural materials for which to build, and the relative ease of the construction along with the high durability and low maintenance of log buildings

Tom Robbins, Mountain Farm Museum (Gatlinburg: Smoky Mountains Association), 10.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

Oconaluftee Farmstead , Open Parks Network. http://purl.clemson.edu/AC27B59570A69F95568A107B51AC4758.

Lix, Henry W. Pioneer farmstead barns, Open Parks Network. http://purl.clemson.edu/57C5F931480FE32B455B8D0CC0F59B4A.

Menning, Ed P.. Children feed goats, Oconaluftee farmstead, Tennessee, 1969, Open Parks Network. http://purl.clemson.edu/4A7B111F920A1292A7FB2210F2F3DC2E.