Barns, Barns, Barns!!!!

This western Kentucky barn is very typical of what a photographer is likely to find from day to day. Including a little background and cloud-filled sky adds to the interest. (Click on image for larger photo).

One of the most common subject for the back road photographer is barns. I’m talking old fashioned barns, made of logs, lumber, and tin, for the most part, dating to a time before the modern pole barn. There are lots of them still standing, and many still being used for farm related activities, or storage. Other’s are in various stages of decay, or abandoned. These are among my favorites to shoot.

An old dairy barn in West Virginia. (Click on image for larger photo).

Finding barns to shoot shouldn’t be difficult. They still dot the landscape, some even surviving in small towns and cities. The hardest part is finding the best angle and framing for an attractive shot. I like to include some background to show the environment, whether the surroundings be a cornfield, pasture, or mountain vista.

A West Virginia barn displaying a quilt pattern. (Click on image for larger photo).
Virginia flue-cured tobacco barns. (Click on image for larger photo).

I don’t like an abundance of blue sky in my photos. Some is fine, as long as there are clouds to add a little interest. I like even lighting, without harsh shadows, unless I’m looking for a specific look or feeling that calls for something else.

A barn on a working farm in West Virginia. (Click on image for larger photo).
A barn nearly hidden along a Kentucky back road. (Click on image for larger photo).

Over the years, I have photographed literally hundreds of barns. I’m always finding new ones to shoot, and never get tired of it. They’re getting harder and harder to find, as progress takes its toll on American farms, and what is left of them. Whenever possible, I always choose to take the back road, as you never know what’s around the next curve.

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Gone, But Not Forgotten

Springtime shot of an abandoned house in Marshall County, KY, that is now gone. (Click on image for larger photo).

The photos in this article have one thing in common. Their subjects are gone. They are a memory, possibly with these photos being the only record of their existence for some of them. They are geotagged on my Flickr site, so that they could be relocated easily by others. These structures have given way to decay, newer houses and mobile homes, and vandalism.

A Marshall County, KY tobacco barn that has been torn down. (Click on image for larger photo).

I had made trips to go back and take additional shots of most of these, with better light or different angles. But, they weren’t to be found. Sometimes, it worthwhile to snap a couple of shots to record what is there, even if the light isn’t right, or you can’t get the shot you want. While these photos may not win any awards, you will be contributing to preserving the history of the community, especially if you make the pictures available online, or to a local historical society.

This barn has been razed, Greenbrier County, WV. (Click on image for larger photo).

Old home sites, barns and other rural structures are becoming harder and harder to find, as progress makes way for the future, clearing old building sites for new. In rural western Kentucky, where I’m from, old barns and abandoned homes used to dot the landscape. Now, more likely than not, you’ll find a mobile home, or possibly a newer home at these locations. I work in rural West Virginia, where there’s still an abundance of these old buildings left. However, time is taking it’s toll, and many will be gone in a short while.

The Goldenrod Showboat was destroyed by vandals in 2017. (Click on image for larger photo).

A few years ago, while working in Illinois, I was driving along the Illinois River, through Kampsville, when I spied what looked like an old showboat docked beside a cornfield. I pulled into the drive and stepped out. There were no tresspassing signs, so I didn’t venture closer. I took out a camera and snapped a few images and left. A deeply faded sign on the sign of the boat identified it as the “Goldernrod Showboat.” With a little online research, I found that it was the last of the great showboats to travel up and down the Mississippi River. Some of history’s great entertainers performed on the boat, including Red Skelton, Pearl Bailey, Cab Calloway and Bob Hope. A group of concerned individuals tried to raise money to save the boat. However, vandals burned the boat down to its hull in late 2017, making for a total loss.

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Mount Airy is Mayberry!

Mount Airy, NC is best known as the boyhood home of Andy Griffith, and the small town that fictional Mayberry, in the television series “The Andy Griffith Show (1960-1968),” is based on.

Wally’s Service Station brings back memories of a simpler time. (Click on image for larger photo).
Wally’s Service. Goober says “Hey!.” (Click on image for larger photo).

Any time is a good time to vist Mount Airy, but thousands of fans of the classic TV series make the trip during the last weekend of September, for the Mayberry Days celebration. There are television stars, good food and music and all the makings of good time, reflecting a day when the world was simpler, and Mayberry was Small Town, America.

Recreation of Wally’s Service Station. (Click on image for larger photo).

I haven’t been to Mayberry Days. That’s a future trip. But, I did stop while driving through Mount Airy with my wife and three dogs, on a cold December day. Time was limited, and we didn’t get to see everything. We stopped at a recreation of Wally’s Service Station, with a copy of the Mayberry jail, next door. I pulled a camera out of my bag and snapped a few pictures. The Darlin truck, and a another, with a sign on the door for Wally’s Service Station, with the slogan “Goober Says ‘Hey!,'” are among the attractions, next to a sign on a building noting H. Sprague, Clerk, and Mayberry Hotel.

The Andy Griffith Show fans will remember The Darlins and their music! (Click on image for larger photo).
The Darlin Truck. (Click on image for larger photo).

Next time, I’ll drop by the Andy Griffith boyhood home, the Andy Griffith Museum, and maybe even have a pork chop sandwich at Snappy Lunch, which was a favorite of Andy Griffith. He even mentioned the diner in a first season episode, “Andy the Matchmaker (1960).”

Next visit will be longer, and there will be more pictures of the attractions we missed.

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