
Barns of Wisconsin Revised, Subsequent Edition
Author(s): Jerold W. Apps (Author), Allen Strong (Illustrator)
- Publisher: Wisconsin Trails
- Publication Date: August 1, 2001
- Edition: Revised, Subsequent
- Language: English
- Print length: 151 pages
- ISBN-10: 0915024489
- ISBN-13: 9780915024483
Book Description
In this revised edition of an award-winning work, Jerry Apps provides an informative and moving account of Wisconsin’s most hand-working structures — its barns. Symbols of optimism, pride, and practicality, barns are as diverse as the people who built them. Here Apps describes the exquisite craftmanship with which Finns, Norweigans, Germans and other immigrant groups built their pioneer barns. We learn, too, how round and octagonal barns developed, and why cupolas and lightning rods were used, and how some of Wisconsin’s barns became covered with colorful murals and billboards. Allen Strang’s meticulous pencil sketches and eight stunning watercolors illustrate the text. Unfortunately, our barns are fast disappearing, victims of urban development and the trend toward large-scale farming. In a new chapter, Apps describes the nationwide movement to save these historic structures, and tells us how some owners have converted barns to innovative new uses. In so doing, he offers both inspiration and practical advice to anyone who believes these magnificent buildings should continue to stand proudly in the Wisconsin landscape.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Barns should be read by every farm buff in the country, as well as those who do not yet qualify. — Richard Perrin, Wisconsin Academy Reivew
This book is for barn buffs — a delightful way to learn about barns in the comfort of an armchair. —
Prairie FarmerThis excellent pictorial history focuses on barns as the center and symbol of pre-World War II Midwestern farming. —
American Library AssociationAbout the Author
Jerry Apps was raised on a central Wisconsin farm, where he spent many hours working in a barn. Currently, he is professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, devoting most of his time to writing about rural American, particularly the northern Midwest. He farms part time in Waushara County is the author of countless books.
Wow! eBook