When the Agricultural College opened its doors in 1857, its farm buildings consisted of one simple, brick horse barn. Out of convenience, it was placed about midway between College Hall and the centerline of the farm (soon to be Farm Lane).
The next barn of record was not completed until after the Reorganization of 1861. The first cattle barn (1862) was placed near the original horse barn, and assembly of the college’s first farm “complex” had begun.
Over the next two decades the complex grew steadily, including: a sheep barn (1865), a swine barn or “piggery” (1870), a “new” horse barn (1872), a corn crib (1878), a tool and implement barn (1881), a grain barn (1883), and a feed barn for the Experiment Station (c.1884).
As the College continued to grow, the academic campus began to encroach upon the farm complex. The piggery was moved eastward in 1885 to make room for the new Mechanical Shops. The Agricultural Laboratory was built within just a few yards of the cattle barn in 1889. And by 1900, the Farm Foreman’s house was moved from the laboratory row to accommodate the first Dairy building, and took the place of the Herdsman’s house partially seen in the above photo.1
Two dairy barns were built in 1897 and 1900 further south along Farm Lane, which avoided the cluttered barn layout but exacerbated its inefficiency. The ad-hoc manner in which the farm complex had developed led to a number of issues: the distance covered by workers in making the day’s rounds was excessive and time-consuming; the layout lacked a centralized manure yard, leading to many separate piles; food supplies were likewise scattered; and proper drainage was proving troublesome. Perhaps worst of all, the farm hospital (a conversion of the 1884 Experiment Station feed barn) was located in the midst of the other barns, in a position where most other livestock would have to pass by—and risk infection—on their way to and from the south fields.2
A major reorganization was in order, and between 1902 and 1908 that is exactly what was done. The farm complex was reassembled to consolidate operations and create a more efficient layout. Although the option of tearing down and building new was briefly considered, Dean Robert Shaw and the Agriculture Department chose instead to move and refurbish the existing barns, since “the old buildings contained hardwood frames covered with white pine siding of a quality such as could scarcely be obtained on the market today at any price.”3
As the core of the new design, a courtyard was created and surrounded by four large barns:
- A gambrel-roofed “New” Horse Barn (48×94 feet, built 1906), the latest and most modern showpiece of the complex, formed the north wing of the new farm court. Of the four wings surrounding the courtyard, this was the only newly built structure—the others were all rebuilt from other locations and uses.
- The Grade Herd Barn formed the east wing and consisted of two repurposed barns, attached end-to-end: to the north the Grade Beef Herd Barn, built from the grain barn (45×80, 1883), moved summer 1905; to the south the Grade Dairy Herd Barn (45×70, 1897), originally located “just a few feet west of the large Dairy Barn”, moved summer 1904. The two barns “form[ed] an unbroken line 150 feet long.”4
- Hidden behind the Sheep Barn in the above photo was the Bull Barn (25×94, 1862). It was originally built as the east annex of the 1862 cattle barn, where it was used as a steer barn and silo. The single-story building was moved 1905–06 to become the south wing. Somehow it was able to accommodate “the nine bulls owned by the college,” even though the report’s description and diagram show only eight stalls available in this barn.5
- The original Sheep Barn (34×90, 1865), moved south and extension (34×60) added to become the west wing. Its completed length matched that of the grade herd barn opposite it, giving the courtyard internal symmetry. The new extension is revealed in the above photo by its darker-colored roof material.6
Cement floors were constructed in all of these barns. Surrounding the barns were their requisite stock pens. At the center of the courtyard, a shed was added for unified manure collection.7
To the east of the main courtyard, nearer Farm Lane, stood the Dairy Barns: a 44×72 main barn with 40×75 annex, both built 1900; with an exercising shed attached to the south that was a rebuild of the original cattle barn (43×64, 1862), moved summer 1906. As a result of lessons learned in its first few years of use, the main dairy barn was remodeled in 1905 to double its stall capacity.8
The 1872 horse barn was moved to a position north of the dairy barns and became the Implement Barn, where it was “used for tools and implements and a wash-room for men.”9
West of the courtyard stood the Piggery (34×80, 1870), “among the first erected at the institution for housing live stock [and] constructed almost solely by student labor. It is a very old building but, nevertheless, today [1908] it contains some excellent material in almost perfect state of preservation. The excellent pine siding and the oak posts, studs, joists, rafters, sheathing and lining, bespeak of days when these materials were plentiful and so inexpensive that nothing but the choicest was used even in the construction of a piggery.” It had moved from its original position in 1885 to accommodate the Engineering Shops, and moved again in 1907 to the position seen above.10
The farm hospital was moved to the far west end of the complex for sanitation, and near the railroad spur for easy transportation. It does not appear in the above photo, being out of frame to the right. Various support buildings and plenty of new fencing completed the arrangement.
As the complex neared completion in 1908, a detailed account of its barns, their design and construction, and the principles behind the reorganization was published by the College as Experiment Station Bulletin № 250; this bulletin was included in the Board of Agriculture’s 47th Annual Report. That same year, construction began on Agriculture Hall on the former site of the 1862 cattle barn and the 1872 horse barn.
In the 1920s, the farm complex moved yet again—across the river to the south, where there was plenty of room to spread out. The farm complex of 1908 is today the location of Kedzie Hall, Bessey Hall, the Computer Center, and the Hannah Administration Building.
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