Browse Items (16 total) Browse All Browse by Tag Search Items Subject is exactly "Barns" Sort by: TitleCreatorIdentifierDate Added Architecture notebook 1: Chase Nursery Barn, near Huntsville, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 6: Henry Hoss House, Jonesborough, Tenn. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 6: House and log barn near Gurley, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 7: Urguhart Log House, Toney, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 10: McDonald Farm Buildings, Huntsville, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 10: Old Salem, N.C. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 10: Winchester Road 2612, Huntsville, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 9: Clopton log barn, on Homer Nance Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 9: Log houses on Hurricane Valley Rd. and Hurricane Creek Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 29: Wheeler House, Cotton Garden, and Pond Spring, in Lawrence County, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 19: Quietdale, in Huntsville, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 22: McCartney-Bone House, or the Bone-Wilbourne House, at 1162 Hurricane Creek Rd., Maysville, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 34: Rural Buildings, in Gurley, Alabama, Big Cove, Alabama, Jeff, Alabama, Chase, Alabama, and Athens, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 48: "Killarney", or the Boganshott House, in Gurley, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. Architecture notebook 57: Draper Residence, on Clinton Ave., Courtland, Alabama. Jones, Harvie P. "You're so cool when you spit brown juice; Other awesome effects of smokeless tobacco include mouth cancer, gum and tooth problems, high blood pressure and nicotine addiction. Barn breath is a sure-thing extra." Department of Defense 1990-11-29 Output Formats atom, csv, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2 Refine search Identifier Select...Defense_Billboard_35loc_jonh_000012_000182loc_jonh_001006_001090loc_jonh_001148_001157loc_jonh_001158_001248loc_jonh_001709_001712loc_jonh_001713_001718loc_jonh_001755_001761loc_jonh_001891_001896loc_jonh_001910_001917loc_jonh_003580_003591loc_jonh_004066_004115loc_jonh_005127_005720loc_jonh_006649_006669loc_jonh_009832_009835loc_jonh_011387_011440 Title Select..."You're so cool when you spit brown juice; Other awesome effects of smokeless tobacco include mouth cancer, gum and tooth problems, high blood pressure and nicotine addiction. Barn breath is a sure-thing extra."Architecture notebook 1: Chase Nursery Barn, near Huntsville, Ala.Architecture notebook 10: McDonald Farm Buildings, Huntsville, Ala.Architecture notebook 10: Old Salem, N.C.Architecture notebook 10: Winchester Road 2612, Huntsville, Ala.Architecture notebook 19: Quietdale, in Huntsville, Alabama.Architecture notebook 22: McCartney-Bone House, or the Bone-Wilbourne House, at 1162 Hurricane Creek Rd., Maysville, Alabama.Architecture notebook 29: Wheeler House, Cotton Garden, and Pond Spring, in Lawrence County, Alabama.Architecture notebook 34: Rural Buildings, in Gurley, Alabama, Big Cove, Alabama, Jeff, Alabama, Chase, Alabama, and Athens, Alabama.Architecture notebook 48: "Killarney", or the Boganshott House, in Gurley, Alabama.Architecture notebook 57: Draper Residence, on Clinton Ave., Courtland, Alabama.Architecture notebook 6: Henry Hoss House, Jonesborough, Tenn.Architecture notebook 6: House and log barn near Gurley, Ala.Architecture notebook 7: Urguhart Log House, Toney, Ala.Architecture notebook 9: Clopton log barn, on Homer Nance Rd. in Madison County, Ala.Architecture notebook 9: Log houses on Hurricane Valley Rd. and Hurricane Creek Rd. in Madison County, Ala. Alternative Title Select...D2.9:Sm7/4 Description Select..."Killarney" was built in 1917. Also known as the Boganshott House. Owner Frank Hall was the grandson of Captain Frank Gurley of the Civil War. John Boganshott, original owner, married one of Frank Gurley's daughters. Includes a large barn on the property. Located in Gurley, Alabama.Addresses and locations of the structures pictured may no longer be accurate, as street names and house numbers change over time. The addresses given reflect the information provided by Harvie Jones at the time he documented these structures.Chase Nursery Barn, built c. 1915. Located near Moores Mill Road near Huntsville, Alabama.Clopton log barn, built 1818. Located on Homer Nance Rd. in northeast Madison County, Alabama. Burned 1982.Cowboy that looks like a skeleton man on a barnDraper Residence, built c. 1830 in Federal and Victorian style. Records indicate the presence of a outbuilding, servants house, shed, barn, and well at one point. Colonial Revival Tabernacle style frame built around the front door and a Victorian veranda added c. 1920. Located on Clinton Ave., Courtland, Alabama.Henry Hoss House, built 1859-1860. Late Federal style with Greek Revival motifs. Springhouse built c. 1859, barn built c. 1914. Located on Blountville Rd. in Jonesborough, Tennessee. Henry Hoss's wife Anna Maria Sevier was the granddaughter of John Sevier, the Revolutionary War general and first governor of Tennessee, making the Henry Hoss House the home of one of Tennessee's important early families.Houses and Log Barn in Gurley, all built c. 1870s. Located northeast of Gurley, Alabama. One of the houses was demolished c. 1985.Hurricane Valley log house, built c. 1820. Federal Period. Includes a log barn and a shed. Located on Hurricane Valley Rd. in Madison County, Alabama. House built c. 1835-1850, dogtrot log house, and log house off Hurricane Creek Rd. in Madison County, Alabama.Joe Wheeler Plantation, also known as the Sherrod-Wheeler House, Cotton Garden, and Pond Spring. A group of thirteen buildings built in the range of c. 1818 to c. 1880: Early 1800s log center-hall barn. Early 20th century frame barn. 19th century log ice house. Servants' house. Pole barn built 20th century. Comissary built c. 1900. Log house built c. 1818. Log dogtrot house built c. 1820. Schoolhouse. The c. 1830 Sherrod House. General Joe Wheeler's post-Civil War period house built c. 1884. Family cemetery. Located in Lawrence County, Alabama. Joseph Wheeler was a Confederate Army General and seved in the Spanish-American War.McCartney-Bone House, also known as the Bone-Wilbourne House, built c. 1820s. Federal Period. There is a c. 1870 dentist office in the backyard, as well as a well-house, barn, and cemetery. Located at 1162 Hurricane Creek Rd. in Maysville, Alabama.McDonald Farm Buildings, built c. 1890-1970. Composed of 13 buildings, including a house built c. 1920s, a house built 1959, a pole-barn built c. 1920-50, and a chicken house and log playhouse built 1974. Located northwest of Old Madison Pike in Huntsville, Alabama.Old Salem, North Carolina. Includes photographs of a kitchen, a barn interior, fences, streets, and walking paths in Old Salem. Includes the outside of the Christoph Vogler House, built 1797, and the John Vogler House-Silversmith and Clock Makers Shop, built 1819.Quietdale, built c. 1840-1850s. Federal style shape, Greek Revival style interior details, and Italiante porches. Includes a servants building, carriage house, and barn. Located in Huntsville, Alabama.Urguhart Log House, built c. 1813. Federal style. Dogtrot house. Barn built c. 1926. Located at 8024 Pulaski Pike, Toney, Alabama. Added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 13, 1992.Various rural buildings. Includes: A pre-1860 limestone chimney in south Gurley, Alabama; Solomon DeBow house, built c. 1840 on McMullen Rd. near Gurley, Alabama; A pre-Civil War house converted to a barn on McMullen Rd. near Gurley, Alabama; A 1 and a half story house in Gurley, Alabama; A store and a barn from New Hope, Alabama; Barns and tralers in in Big Cove, Alabama; Empty stores in New Hope, Alabama; An empty store, a cattle shed, and barns in Jeff, Alabama; A Victorian house north of Jeff, Alabama; The Chase Nursery Barn in Chase, Alabama; Barns and houses near Athens, Alabama.Winchester Road 2612, built c. 1840-1850. Federal style with Greek Revival interior components. Includes a barn and a corncrib. Located at the intersection of Winchester Rd. and Blue Spring Rd. in Huntsville, Alabama. Demolished c. 1977. Creator Select...Department of DefenseJones, Harvie P. Temporal Coverage Select...1980-19891990-1999 Subject Remove filter...Barns Type Select...Photograph albumsPhotographsPostersStill ImageText Language Select...en