Harrisdale Heritage Farm

Harrisdale barn, built in the summer of 1920, was a Gordon-Van Tine Company “kit” of pre-cut lumber shipped by rail from the Davenport company. It was actually the Harris’ family home during the summer of 1921, when their old house was torn down and the current house was built. Raymond Harris, Ardyth Harris Gillespie’s grandfather, hired help for much of the farm work while he served as “general contractor” for building the house. The home is as lovely as this brilliant reddish-orange roofed barn is today on this Heritage farm (150+ years in the same family). (2024 photo)

Today the barn is used for storing hay, straw, feed, and farm supplies. In the spring it also houses a flock of 15 Katahdin ewes and two rams. Currently there are 24 lambs (See 2024 photo below). Katahdin hair sheep, developed in the 1950s, are raised chiefly for meat. They grow a short, thick, coarse overcoat of hair for winter, which they then shed in the spring, leaving a softer, short coat of hair, as opposed to sheep breeds that have wool coats requiring yearly shearing. 

Chickasaw County treasure

People driving by on a gravel road in Chickasaw County can admire this arched-roof barn that was saved and restored by owner Adolph Havlik, a farmer in north-central Iowa, at 1745 Cheyenne Ave., Ionia.

It was built in 1912 as a dairy barn by Adolph’s late wife’s grandfather, Nicholas Hugeback, and later was used for beef cattle. In 1953 it was damaged by a tornado and restored. Later, the foundation was replaced with glacier-deposited stones found in the area. Gray steel siding was installed in 2007, as well as a steel roof in 2021.

It serves as an example of the high regard farmers have for the barns built and used by their ancestors. (2022 photo)