Why Round Barns?

Round barns may have developed from the English putting a roof over the
horses walking in a circle to provide power to operate mills. They called the
building a gin-gan. The earliest recorded many-sided or polygonal barn in
the U.S. belonged to our first President. George Washington built a 16 sided
barn in 1792 on his Dogue Run farm near Mount Vernon, Va. It was used as
a treading mill to thresh grain. This barn decayed and was finally taken down
after 1870. A replica of this barn was erected in 1995-96.

The first true round barn in the U.S. was built in Massachusetts in 1824 by
the Shakers. It is said that the Shakers preferred round barns so that evil
spirits could not hide in the corners. Since the Shakers learned how to make
black ash baskets from the Indians, it is possible that their decision to use a
circular construction for a barn was also influenced by the Indian's use of the
circle for teepees and wigwams. George Winter's sketches of wigwams in
Chief Kee-wau-nay's village in 1837 near the present Lake Bruce look like
round barns.

Another theory is that the circular construction was derived from the
round-houses built to turn the trains around, as the steam locomotive was
also invented in the 1820's.

The first of Indiana's round barns was built in 1874. The height of the "round
barn building boom" was 1910, when more round barns were built in Indiana
than any other year. The last round barn built in Indiana was in 1936.

Land grant colleges including Purdue University advocated round barns as
economical in the early 1900's. The University of Illinois published a booklet,
The Economy of the Round Barn, in 1910. But they advised putting a silo in
the middle to help support the roof. Fulton County's round barns do not
have silos, but have unsupported roofs.

Round barns are more economical in several ways. The capacity of a circle
is larger than that of a rectangle with the same amount of siding. Having the
livestock all face the center saved the farmer steps when feeding. It was
faster, easier and cheaper to build a round barn than a post-and-beam barn
because the round barn uses lumber that is one-inch thick instead of
foot-thick beams, and used nails instead of pegs.

Round barns are now an "endangered species." Several are disappearing
every year. They cost too much to repair, and farmers cannot afford to pay
taxes on them for storage because the big modern farm tractors and
machinery won't fit through the doors. The neglected barns are succumbing
to wind, weather and fire and are being torn down.

The Fulton County Historical Society has established a National Round Barn
Center of Information to collect information on round barns and help find
ways to save them. Whenever a round barn is threatened, please notify
FCHS, and we will try to find someone who will take it and save it. If you want
a free round barn, ask us. Of course, the catch is that you have to move it
and restore it, which may cost $65,000. That is what FCHS paid to move and
restore the beautiful Fulton County Round Barn Museum in 1989-1991. The
Kelley Agricultural History Museum at Tipton paid $80,000 to move and
restore their round barn in 1997-99.

Many barns are red but a large number of barns were always painted white.

Learn more about the Fulton County Round Barn Museum
Fulton County, Indiana Round Barn Capital of the World
Why Round Barns?
Fulton County Historical Society
Located in North Central Indiana










Round Barn Museum  
Built in 1924. Moved and
restored in 1990-91. Farm
machinery and antique tool
displays include buggy,
covered wagon, 1912 Lincoln
truck, horse-drawn reaper,
sheller, milk cans, horse and
cow stalls, etc. Open
Mon.-Sat. 9 am - 5 p.m. May -
September. Closed holidays.