Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member DaKender
N 37° 19.386 W 093° 30.661
15S E 454724 N 4130838
Gilmore Barn (Octagonal Barn)
Waymark Code: WMH8M
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 07/13/2006
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member showbizkid
Views: 58

The barn was built in 1880 and is probably the earliest polygonal or round barn in Missouri. It is the largest known barn of its type in the state, and is the only one with full stone wall construction. It exhibits superb design and workmanship, and is exceptionally well preserved.

Here is some info I picked up on the net during a school project for my son. Do not remember what source it came from but I know it was wrote by Robert Gilmore.

Highway 160 leaves Springfield's north side, out by the airport, and heads northwest through a rapidly urbanizing landscape. New houses, subdivisions, convenience stores, even a country club and golf course line this pleasant route well past Willard, a town whose main street has been bypassed by the highway in the interest of moving commuters more expeditiously.

About two miles past Willard 160 swings due west, towards Ash Grove, and the two-lane blacktop moves through countryside, which begins to look more rural and a little less suburban. There are more farmsteads, with barns and silos, livestock, and machinery.

About halfway between Willard and Ash Grove, the highway drops down into the Clear Creek valley, and then begins a gentle rise again. That is when you see, over to the fight, the Round Barn. The Gilmore Barn.
It's not really round, it's octagonal, but that's a quibble. Everybody around here calls it the Round Barn, and since just about every other barn in Greene County is a conventional square or rectangular shape, there's no doubt what barn they're referring to.

The Gilmore Barn? Mike and Wilma McGilvry now own the barn and the 220 acre farm on which it sits. But they know their barn was built, somewhere around the turn of this century, by my grandfather and my great-grandfather, so they won't mind if I get a bit proprietary and call it the Gilmore barn.

My Grandfather, Francis, and his father were fanning together on the Clear Creek valley farm before the turn of the century. Francis was one of 12 children (two were stillborn) of James Kannon and Saphronia Edmonson Gilmore. James Kannon was only five years old when his father, James Allen Gilmore, came to Greene County from Tennessee in 1835 and settled about a mile and a half west of Willard, not very far from where the Round Barn was later built.

Anecdotal evidence differs as to when Francis and Kannon built the barn. Some say 1898, others say as late as 1907. We'll try to find out more precisely. We've just begun the research necessary to nominate the barn to the National Register of Historic Places, so this Preservation Comer article can only be a preliminary look at what we now know about the barn.

A former neighbor told Wilma McGilvry it cost $3000 to build. The gently sloping land on which the barn sits provides natural grade-level entrances to both the first and second levels. The foundation is limestone quarried from the farm. The lower level walls, cut limestone blocks, are a full two feet thick, and the two`cattle entrances to this first level, on the east and north, are arched with brick. Four windows at the first floor level are also brick-arched.

Upper walls, at the second drive-in level, are a foot thick. The mortar holding the limestone blocks together was made of lime, sand and water--no cement was used. The sectional cone roof now has green composition shingles covering the older wood shingles. The roof is topped with an eight-sided slatted cupola, which admits both light and ventilation into the haymow.

Inside, on the first level, is an octagonal feeding trough, surrounding a corncrib, which extends into the second level. The third level of the barn is a haymow, which has held as many as 6,000 bales of alfalfa.
A maze of joists, beams, and rafters, probably cut from farm timber, provide structural integrity as well as visual pleasure to the interior. The intricate angles are snugly fitted, and most structural beam joints are pegged.

There aren't many round or polygonal barns left in Missouri. Mary Stiritz, who has done surveys for the Department of Natural Resources, has identified only eight such barns statewide, most of them concentrated in northern counties. This is certainly the only one in Greene County, and perhaps in the Missouri Ozarks.

That the bam is still standing, let alone in excellent structural condition, is a tribute to its several owners over the past 70 years, especially the McGilvrys and James and Ida Gold, from whom the McGilvrys bought the property. These families have not permitted the bam to deteriorate. They have kept a good roof on it and paint on the limestone walls, replaced rotted timbers and, importantly, have continued to use it as a barn--to shelter livestock and to store hay.

I continue to ponder on a simple question. Why? Why did the Gilmore father and son decide to break with tradition and build an octagonal barn rather than the familiar rectangular gable- or gambrel-roofed form that would have been on all the surrounding farmsteads? Could they have known of New York phrenologist Orson Squire Fowler who promoted octagonal buildings as an ideal shape for promoting peace and harmony? Or did they have a religious motive in building a structure "to keep the devil from hiding in corners?"

My Scotch-Irish ancestors probably had more practical reasons for building their barn as they did. There were many circular and polygonal barns built in agricultural North America during the latter part of the 19th century, and the Gilmores may simply have been following the fashion. Perhaps they figured out that there was more useable space in the polygonal shape than in a square structure of comparable size. Maybe they thought the eight-sided stone structure would be more resistant to the tornadoes that frequently sweep the Springfield Plain. Or were they showing off a bit by building a monument that they knew would be unique and would stand as testimony to their farming success?

Whatever they’re reasoning, I'm glad they built the barn the way they did. The polygonal barn is a vanishing rural landmark. This barn still stands, however, safely in the stewardship of owners dedicated to preserving this piece of Ozarks heritage for the future.

UPDATE:
The location is now the home to "The Round Barn on Clear Creek, LLC" historic site event venue.
More info can be found at (visit link)
Relevant Web Site: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
Give the date of your visit, a brief description of your experience, and post at least ONE ORIGINAL photo, if possible. Add any additional history or information that you may have about this building.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Octagon Buildings
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
dc2swhill visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 04/18/2013 dc2swhill visited it
r8ce2win visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 10/14/2011 r8ce2win visited it
BruceS visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 09/30/2011 BruceS visited it
Fattuhr visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 07/22/2010 Fattuhr visited it
Spookiy visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 03/14/2007 Spookiy visited it
pogwog visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 12/29/2006 pogwog visited it
C4A visited Gilmore Barn between Ash Grove and Wilard, MO 10/22/2006 C4A visited it

View all visits/logs