littleneckhalfshell
Sr. Member
- Jun 21, 2005
- 335
- 81
There is an old farm that belongs to my family up in the Catskills of New York State.
There are two houses on the property, the oldest has peg & beam in the oldest part of it with roman numerals on the beams it is also on a laid up loose stone foundation with a small cellar hole where the oil tank and boiler reside. The outhouse, a two-hole'r fell down a number of years ago, but it was not the kind with a hole under it, rather it had a sheet metal box that slid through a door in the side of the outhouse. It had been used for a shed for the last 40 years, it was about 8'x8' square. The old carriage barn fell down about 40 years ago, it was built on the edge of a drop off. Also in the back area of the orchard is what looks like a rectangular foundation, (only some stones on the downhill side show that it was some kind of structure, not sure how far into the orchard area it goes) All the Orchard trees are now dead and decayed, only the stump holes remain for the most part. A stream flows past the one side of the property. Ok, anyone have an idea where I should search first? Years ago at the base of one of the apple trees, before they all died, my dad found a broken bayonet and a Civil War Brass sword belt plate.
Since I have limited time and only an old garrett ground hog to search with, what would you say is the best way to approach this property? In some places the bedrock pokes through the surface.
There are two houses on the property, the oldest has peg & beam in the oldest part of it with roman numerals on the beams it is also on a laid up loose stone foundation with a small cellar hole where the oil tank and boiler reside. The outhouse, a two-hole'r fell down a number of years ago, but it was not the kind with a hole under it, rather it had a sheet metal box that slid through a door in the side of the outhouse. It had been used for a shed for the last 40 years, it was about 8'x8' square. The old carriage barn fell down about 40 years ago, it was built on the edge of a drop off. Also in the back area of the orchard is what looks like a rectangular foundation, (only some stones on the downhill side show that it was some kind of structure, not sure how far into the orchard area it goes) All the Orchard trees are now dead and decayed, only the stump holes remain for the most part. A stream flows past the one side of the property. Ok, anyone have an idea where I should search first? Years ago at the base of one of the apple trees, before they all died, my dad found a broken bayonet and a Civil War Brass sword belt plate.
Since I have limited time and only an old garrett ground hog to search with, what would you say is the best way to approach this property? In some places the bedrock pokes through the surface.