The "Mansion House" as it was called when it was built in the mid 19th century
Built in the late 1850's by a Mennonite farmer named Levi Horst, the farmhouse, as it stands today, was something of a showplace in the area. According to census records from 1870, old Levi was quite the wealthy gentleman-farmer. His property holdings exceeded US $70,000 (in 1870 terms...$million$ in 2012 money), and his personal assets weren't too far behind.
1849 "Brick end" barn - note the design (unique to every barn of the style built)
This unique brick design led, a couple of years ago, to the identification of the farm as the same one depicted in a painting by Charles H. Wolf c. 1870 - a painting that today hangs in the Folk Art Museum in New York City (a Sotheyby's associated museum: http://www.folkartmuseum.org/?p=folk&t=images&id=4145)
Although the same view today is nearly impossible to achieve due to tree growth, the layout of the buildings from the c. 1870 painting and the modern layout are remarkably similar. So similar that the historian who verified the identification of the farm was amazed at how accurate the painting was, and the fact that so little had changed in nearly 140 years!
A side-view of the "Little House", the first home on the farm that was used by the family while the "Mansion House" was being constructed. Today, it sits beside the main farmhouse as it always has, and plans are being slowly formulated to completely restore the structure to its original condition.
One of the farms many red and white Holstein calves (no name for this one, as she came along before I started hanging out here and began actually naming the calves - more on "calf naming" procedures later)...
SOME GENERAL VIEWS
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