It's not looking very good, but it's still standing.

(Click on images to enlarge)
Here's a detail from a photo of the back yard I took not long after I bought this place in 1990 …

… and here it is circa 1998:

Yes, I let it go to pieces. It's returning to the earth whence it came.
The barn was probably built by George Bodamer — or perhaps I should say, by people hired by George Bodamer, who in 1923 was 70 years old.
3 comments:
Happy hundredth birthday barn!!
I don't know, it looks like it has good bones, with a little.....
A little WD-40, maybe?
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