Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1986-04, Page 85sion and contraction. All this movement was hard on the mortar chinked between Togs. In addition, the combination of sunlight, rain, and wind eroded the surface of all unpainted wood. If a settler wanted his log house to last a long time, he repaired the chinking in a year or two and then covered it over with ship -lap siding to protect it from the elements. It is possible that log houses were covered for other reasons. There was a stigma against people who lived in log houses so a covering would make it Tess obvious. Log houses were often alive with bed bugs at night. Few surviving log houses in this area had fireplaces in them. By the time settlers came into these coun- ties, cast iron woodstoves were readily available. If a pioneer housewife had the choice between cooking in a fireplace or on a woodstove, she would choose the more efficient stove. It had a dry- ing rack above and a stovepipe to a chimney upstairs. The house was free from woodsmoke. Pioneers living in log houses were terrified of fire. There was a rule: the last person to bed put out the fire in every stove. The first one up in the morning lit the kit- chen stove. Log houses heated up quickly. Most permanent log houses in this area were a storey and a half. Some were two storeys. The front door was customarily placed in the centre of the front wall with a rear door directly behind. There were two windows at the front and others only where needed on the sides and back. In the older houses, the window sashes con- tained 20 or 24 panes of glass per window and the later ones had 12 panes. It was impossible to transport larger pieces of glass in wagons on terrible roads. The stairs were located usually in the centre of the front wall leading from the front door or near a corner so that the stairwell turned and followed the roofline, an efficient use of space. The gables at either end of the house were not constructed of Togs. Instead these triangular shapes consisted of uprights that were covered with vertical boards on the outside. The top log of the end walls served as the support base for the upper window frames as well as the brick chimney which started at that point. One can often spot log houses, now covered over, by the placement of the gable win- dows in that particular position. Today, it has become fashion- able to live in a log house. Many have been dismantled and rebuilt in distant places. Most of these no longer have original walls, doors, or windows and little of their true pioneer character remains. Wood preservatives make it possible to show off the logs and the chinking. The owners of the remaining pioneer houses, still on their historic sites, should be wary of how they are adapted for addi- tional modern use. The closer a building remains to its original state and construction materials, the greater its value is to history. These pioneer houses need protec- tion. The temptation to "cutify" an old treasure should be recogniz- ed and avoided. Approximately 80 pioneer log houses, in continuous use since they were built, exist in Perth, Huron, Bruce, and Grey Counties. With care they should last an addi- tional 200 years. ❑ James Anderson Stratford -Perth Archives 1986 CROP -ONE STOP QUALITY SPRING SEED SUPPLIES • Corn • Small grains • Canola • Soybeans and White beans • AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS • COMMODITY CONTRACTS TWIN COUNTY GRAIN ELEVATOR R.R. 3, Brussels, Ontario NOG 1H0 519-356-2292 519-356-2293 Brussels Rodger Diegel, Manager APRIL 1986 89