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The Crane Comes Today!
The barn hasn’t looked like this since late November, 1889.
Mathew Hall Lumber, also founded in 1889, provided the materials for the barn. Mathew Hall’s Great-grandson John Hall was able to find the original hand-written ledger entry on page 65 dated November 5th, 1889 for Joseph Schellinger for $106.51 with a discount for paying cash.
Day 7 – The Hard Work Continues
A note about the third image: When Chris Schellinger was asked “what is it?” He responded “a thingamajig!” If you know what it actually is let us know!
Day 1 & 2 – The Take Down Begins
This past Father’s Day weekend Chris Schellinger spent his Saturday and Sunday doing one of his favorite things, a big project. Specifically, he began the task of disassembling the Undersander barn. The first to come off? The siding. As I helped my dad with the barn on Father’s Day, I couldn’t help but wonder what Joseph Schellinger would think if he knew that his great-great-granddaughter was helping to save and preserve this stunning structure he built so many years ago.
The Undersander Barn
In 1889 Joseph Schellinger, recently arrived from Wisconsin, agreed to build a barn for John Undersander. They agreed the barn would be built for $100 and that every evening John would provide the men with a small keg of beer.
Together with the skills of German craftsmen, materials from the just formed Mathew Hall Lumber Company, and beer from the local brewery, the Undersander barn was built.