Woodshed

These next few stops are functional buildings, which reveal some of the tasks done by Americans living in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Wood was the major source of fuel for heat in the 1700s.  Fireplaces or stoves were used for cooking and for heating homes.  A property this size would use a great deal of wood for heating and cooking throughout the year.  The wood shed kept the wood dry and accessible to folks living in the house or cooking in the kitchen. 

Imagine – it is January 1765, a cold and snowy winter.  Not only are you cooking every day, but you also need to keep the fireplaces and stoves, one in each room, warm as much as possible.  You would use quite a bit of wood!

 

The next stop – the smoke house – is just to your right.

LandMark: Lakewood
  1. Tobias Fike, "Make Broken," burned and dead tree limbs, wood, found objects, plaster, plastic bags, zip ties, rope, and metal hardware
  2. Scottie Burgess, "Sky Vessel," cast iron, upcycled dead tree, and paint
  3. Anna Kaye, "Preserve," tree stumps, miniature scenery, and resin birds
  4. Kalliopi Monoyios, "Knot," single-use plastic packaging, HDPE house wrap, polypropylene landscaping fabric, and polyester thread
  5. Eileen Roscina, "Shelter," willow
  6. Nicole Anona Banowetz, "Respire," fabric
  7. Jaime Molina, "Sunlaps," mixed media
  8. Tiffany Matheson, "Caught," reclaimed ghost net, plastic bottles, wire, and paint
  9. Mia Mulvey, "Albedo," ceramic, wood, pigment
  10. Jason Mehl, "Spoor of the Anthropocene," CNC Plywood