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The Cost of Farming – Outbuildings

Most cribs were constructed of wood and, like the one pictured here, measured about 30 by 35 feet.

With an increasing need for livestock feed storage, some McLean County farmers built much larger cribs. On the Welsh farm south of Gridley, a 30 by 70 foot crib was built. The slatted walls allowed the circulation of air, which helped to dry the corn quickly so it would not mold or rot.

Labor saving portable elevators, first introduced in the 1890s, were used to “elevate” ear corn into storage cribs.

Ear corn was dumped from the farmer’s wagon into a hopper. A belt with scoops passed through the hopper where it picked up the ear corn and moved it up the device to be dropped into the crib. At first powered by horses, area farmers switched to tractor power soon after they purchased a tractor. Such devices were common on McLean County farms.

The Portable Elevator Manufacturing Company, located on the near east side of Bloomington, was a regional manufacturer of this important new farm implement. This promotional image illustrated how it worked using horse power. Portable Elevator Manufacturing Company pamphlet image, circa 1900.

When concrete products began to be manufactured, Bloomington’s Portable Elevator Manufacturing Company patented a concrete block corn crib.

The crib featured one of the company’s patented interior elevators. It moved ear corn to the two ventilated storage areas on either side of the drive, and small grains to the storage area directly above the drive.

George Perrin Davis had one installed on his Buck Creek Farm south of Gridley. The modern crib, with its solid concrete foundation and blocks, was long lasting and minimized a problem most farmers experienced with corn storage — rats. Davis’ tenant, William Printz, and later Lawrence Gilmore, greatly benefited from the addition of this crib to the farm.

Portable Elevator Manufacturing Company promotional image of its concrete crib with interior elevator, circa 1920.

The Davis Ewing Concrete Company also sold concrete corn cribs. Like its concrete fence posts, the company promoted the longevity of its cribs. Ewing sold the company soon after it became involved in a patent infringement case. The Illinois Concrete Crib Company modified its block design and continued to do business into the early 1930s.

Illinois Concrete Crib Company advertisement, 1930.

Hay hoists were used to lift large amounts of hay into the barn loft.

Secured to a large pulley, the hoist was filled with hay, then raised to the large opening in the barn. A second rope was used to pull the hoist across a track inside the barn, allowing the hay to be evenly spread.

Corn and Grain Bins

Corn cribs that stored corn on the ear became obsolete after corn combines, which shelled corn in the field, were introduced. Instead, corn farmers needed grain bins to store their shelled corn.

On-farm storage had a cost, but was typically less than elevator storage. And, if the farmer purchased a dryer, he could harvest his crops sooner, dry them himself, and avoid price deductions at the elevator when he sold them.

Raymond Park, tenant farmer on the Larry Funk farm near McLean, supervised the installation of this grain storage and drying system in 1959. With the help of his hired hand, the two could combine 20 acres of corn per day and dry 2000 bushels.

With 300 acres of corn, Park hoped to fill all eight grain bins—a total of 30,000 bushels of corn. Funk paid for the new augers, dryer, and storage and the two split the cost of the fuel and oil needed to run the dryer and fans.

Augers were necessary to move grain. Housed inside a tube or hopper, the spiral shaped device was turned by a motor in order to elevate the grain.

Corn was first dumped from the grain truck into a ground level hopper (lower left corner of the image). From there it was elevated with an auger. At maximum height the grain dropped down into the dryer (center of image). Once dry, another auger moved it into storage.

As corn yields approached 200 bushels per acre in the last half of the 20th century, on-farm grain drying and storage systems continued to get bigger and more complex.

Why do you think farmers were willing to invest in this equipment?

Many farmers chose to store their grain because they could earn higher profits if they waited.

In 1965 the Bloomington Pantagraph reported that, in the previous 20, years farmers who held on to their grain during harvest and then sold it between mid-November and mid-July earned as much as 17.5 cents more per bushel, depending on the market.

An unidentified McLean County farmer dumped his corn into a hopper. From there it was augered into his dryer, and then into storage.

Machine Sheds

By the 1970s converted wooden barns and sheds were no longer big enough to store and protect the equipment McLean County farmers purchased.

Metal clad machine sheds, constructed with square wood posts and sheet steel or aluminum siding, were an economical replacement that also provided space for working on farm machinery.

East Bloomington farmer Tim Bittner added a 60 x 40 foot machine shed for equipment storage in 1966. In 1981 he added the smaller shed in order to have space to work on his equipment, as well as to store seed prior to planting.

As equipment continued to get bigger, so did McLean County farmers’ machine sheds.

By the late 1990s some of these sheds featured airplane hanger doors—the McLean County farmer’s best solution for getting large and expensive tractors, combines, and other equipment out of the elements.

The scale of newer machine sheds built in the 1990s is evident in this aerial view of Hartzold’s shed.

In 1996 Dry Grove farmer Joe Hartzold built a 90 x 90 foot shed with a 21 foot ceiling to provided storage for his large equipment as well as space for working on it.

To simplify moving large pieces of equipment into and out of the building, Hartzold included a 16 x 50 foot bi-fold hangar door on one end and a 16 x 24 foot sliding door on the side.

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