JOHANNES HARBARD WINEGARDNER (WENDELINUS) was born 1718 in
Germany, and died on 08 Oct 1779, in Loudoun Co. VA. He married CATHERINE some time around
1747. She was born about 1727 in Germany. It is not known where or when she died.
John Herbert (Johannes Harbard) Winegardner arrived Sept.15,
1752 on the ship named "Two Brothers" at the port of Philadelphia. The ship
sailed from Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, commanded by Thomas Arnot. The passenger
list also included the name of Conrad Winegardner who possibly was a brother of Herbert's.
Conrad was living in Frederick County Maryland in 1790 as shown by the census records.
Nothing is known of Herbert from the time he landed in Philadelphia in 1752 to the year of
1779 when he died in Loudoun County, Virginia. His Will was dated Sept. 9, 1779 and is
found in Will Book B Page 308 in the Courthouse at Leesburg, Virginia. Four children were
named: Henry b. 1749, Herbert b. Jan 1, 1758, Charity b. 1754, and Mary b. 1778. It reads
as follows:
In the name of God Amen. I, Harbard Winegardner, of the
County of Loudoun being sick and weak of body but perfect sense and memory, calling to
mind my mortal state, that it is appointed once for all men to die, I appoint this my last
Will and Testament, and bequeath the goods that God has been pleased to give me in the
following manner, viz.:
I give to my son Harbard Winegardner the Plantation where
I now live, to him and to his heirs.
Item. I give to my son Harbard my wagon and geers and bay
mare and the young bald fase horse free, and one colt, first choice. Also my wheat fan and
plow and two cows Star and White fase, and four sheep, the first choice, and the largest
and smallest iron kettles: and the best iron pott and tea kettle and tramels and stove and
the best chest and three pewter basons and five pewter plates and twelve spoons and the
Bible.
Item. I leave all the remaining part of my estate to be
equally divided amongst my four children viz, Henry Winegardner, Harbard Winegardner,
Charity Houghman and Mary Barb. Also I appoint my son Harbard Winegardner to be the
Executor of this my last Will and Testament. In Witness thereof I have hereunto set my
hand and seal this ninth day of September 1779.
Signed and sealed in the presence of James Jenings, Jacob
Barb and Anthony Houghman.
Signed Harbard Winegardner
______________________________________________________________________________
The Will was admitted to Probate October 11,1779. An
appraisal of his personal property was filed January 10, 1780 amounting to 2151 shillings
and 12 pence. The inventory consisted of the usual things needed to run a farm such as (a)
Livestock- horses, cows, sheep, calves (b) Tools -scythes, mattock, mauls, axes, hoes,
rakes, wedges, copper tools, carpenter tools (c) household articles -pots, kettles,
trammels, lantern, pans, ladles, candle stick hooks, shovels, tongs, dishes, basins,
tinware, coffee mill, trenchers, knives, forks, spice box, meal sieve, chests, beds,
table, loom, flax brake, sheets, bed tickspr. shoes, box of pipes, , stove, etc, (d)
Personal-hat, waistcoat, great coat, 2 pr. leather breeches, 4 shirts, 3 pr. trousers, 2 2
pr. spectacles, ink pott, hone and razor etc., and Miscellaneous--Bee hive, grindstone,
dough-trough, turnip stamper, sheep shears, canisters, decanters, books, shoemakers tools,
three deer skins, three bells, machinery, etc. This Inventory is found in Will book B,
page 317, Loudoun Co. courthouse, Leesburg, Virginia.
While Americans were busy making a living, many have awakened
to the fact that a majority of the old barns on family farms across the country have
disappeared and that many of the remainder are rapidly following. 'Grandfather's old barn'
seems to have always been there. We are now shocked and dismayed to find it hopelessly
tumbled down. Whatever it may represent to us, with its passing we lose a part of our
agrarian heritage that cannot be replaced. It may be too late for many of these veteran
structures, but there are those who are feverishly repairing and restoring a few that are
left. Witness this old barn, the Winegardner barn, an excellent example of the few older
ones destined to survive: This story started when Johannes Harbard Winegardner
(1713-1779), sailed on the ship "Two Brothers" from the Electorate of Palatine,
Triers, Hapsburg, Germany and landed at Philadelphia in September 15, 1752. He first lived
in Lancaster County, the Pennsylvania colony, and then ultimately settled near Leesburg in
the colony of Virginia. The patriarchal Johannes gave his Leesburg, Virginia, plantation
solely to Herbert (equiv., Harbard, born 1752) his namesake, in his will. The older
brother, Henry Winegardner (born 1750), inherited no land to give him a start, nor tie him
down, and so 'adventured' to the then wild frontier. He pioneered near Gratiot, Ohio,
resulting in that area's wide proliferation of the Winegardner name today.
Many early Winegardner cousins are buried in the Poplar Fork
Cemetery near the site of the "Olde School" Baptist Church. Herbert Winegardner
and his wife Elizabeth Barb also soon followed to take up farming in Richland Township of
Fairfield County, near what would become Rushville, in 1805-6. They were doubtless
tantalized and enticed by brother Henry's letters from the frontier. Southeastern Ohio was
new territory just opened up in 1798 by the blazing and construction of Zane's Trace, the
very first trail in the Northwest Territories outside of the original thirteen colonies.
It was interior Ohio's early pioneer days but already all of the area's homesteading (ie.,
free) land with rich soil was snapped up! In order to allow for the choice selection of
the better soils they chose to purchase lands set aside by Congress, some still unsold and
unsettled. The sale of these lands was to fund construction of those famous one-room
schoolhouses that dotted the early frontier. There were two such schools, later
constructed, on the "school lands" purchased by Herbert, the Kerlin School and
the Oakthorpe School.
The farm site was also selected so as to be near a reliable
source of fresh water. The springhouse marks that spot. The brother, Henry, probably did
not go into farming. Indeed, he may have had no interest at all in agriculture, or else he
might have taken part in the inheritance of his father's plantation instead of his younger
brother. Family records mention that in 1817 a son of Henry traveled to his uncle's farm,
referring to Herbert's, to pick out seedlings for his father's orchard. This means that by
that early time Herbert Winegardner's farm orchard was already cleared, planted and
yielding. The stone foundation of the Rushing Spring springhouse dates from these earliest
times. Herbert was a distiller and became quite a wealthy landowner. In those times a
distiller's living was considered a lawful, if tawdry, occupation. Only after being banned
by the Prohibition did the livelihood become known as 'moonshining.' Unearthed foundation
stones downstream of the spring, just to the north of the springhouse itself, outline the
location of the old stillhouse.
Old Herbert died December 17, 1830, and was buried in his
Winegardner Cemetery (on the east side of Marsh's Chapel Road, now known as Thornville
Road, about two miles north of Zane's Trace, US 22; note: Ohio's State Route 664 did not
yet exist). His will, signed in German, made sons, Anthony and Jacob, executors of his
1,500 acre estate resulting in the 'A&JW ' designations on land maps of the day and
impressed into old cement work near the barn. The estate was maintained undivided, and
thrived under the management of its executor, Jacob (1809-1891), Anthony having
predeceased Jacob. "Jake," personally, would have inherited 'merely' the
160-acre "Home Farm" portion where the old Winegardner barn stands today. As
executor, however, he remained in authority over the entire estate, and acted in the place
of Herbert, Sr. Although this unusual arrangement probably left some disgruntled there is
a strong suggestion that it was a part of a larger agreement between Jake and his
siblings.
This provided continuity for, and slowed the generational
scattering of the family estate, as well as allowing for its continued growth. The estate
eventually included not only numerous farms, complete with their farm buildings, but also
two water mills, several residential properties (at least one is still standing), and a
saloon. Interestingly, Jake had also funded construction of 'the Winegardner Chapel,' in
Rushville as well! This barn's cavernous interior (dimensions 50' w 90' l 40' h) suggests
abundance and the three-story brick I-house home exhibited obvious wealth. The original
brick home was a classic complete with solid black walnut paneling and six fireplaces.
Jacob married late in life to the widow Mary Rader of Amanda. Although the marriage was a
happy one, it was allegedly her son, his stepson, that broke in and stole the old
gentleman's gold horde stored in a hearth cupboard. The stolen gold coins carried a face
value of an estimated $20,000! The robbery resulted in a posse chase, two hangings, and a
fugitive escapee (young master Rader), creating significant excitement for the regional
papers.
An important local tradition that probably started during
Jake's era was the "Winegardner Reunion." The family name, in-laws, and
influence had scattered far and wide. The 'home place' was the natural location, and
provided the manpower, preparation and facility to celebrate it annually. Multitudes of
cousins, in-laws, friends and neighbors came from the Thornville area to the Amanda region
and beyond. It was the social event for the entire community and where many people and
couples met and fell in love. The initials "S W" on the old barn's cornerstone,
referring to its builder, are plainly visible but the apparent date of 1732 seems a
mystery. Perhaps it is an early 'typo,' or result of weather erosion, hinting of 1832 as
the construction date? Native Indians were still present near Rushville on Winegardner
lands! Most likely the initials belong to a Samuel Winegardner (1799-1868). Sam was a
younger brother of the senior Herbert, and thus, Jake's uncle. He was an influential
businessman of the local community, the first ever postmaster of Gratiot, then mayor of
Newark, Ohio State Senator 1846-48, and eventual president of the old Franklin Bank. Might
he have been responsible for overseeing and contracting the erection of this large
Pennsylvania-Dutch styled barn? The mortice-and-tenon barn frame is constructed largely of
virgin oak. The barn's wooden pinned hand-hewn open framing beams average 10" x
10", and when green weighed about 100 pounds per foot of length. A 50' long oak beam,
such as those used as floor sills in this barn, would have weighed two to three tons!
Planned overbuilding was a hallmark of early barn builders!
Of the various types of American barns, Pennsylvania-Dutch barns were typically the
largest. They featured two stories, two mammoth hay bays, two granaries, two harness or
tack areas, a ground-level bank entrance to the second story, and a forebay or overhang to
the rear. The lower level was reserved for the draft animals and other livestock. Ohio
barn builders mainly used open frame construction, allowing for quick assembly, although
the oldest examples were built of logs. In Pennsylvania many builders used stone or brick
in the upper walls as well as in the foundation. Hand-hewn timbers were present in all.
They were also known as German or Switzer barns reflecting their ancient Teutonic origins.
In a huge barn-raising party the first section of massive
frame was assembled flat on the ground, then pushed up by hand, using poles. The following
sections were pulled up by ropes and pulley systems tethered to the first. This open
timber frame's "Yankee" construction technique became generally widespread after
1830. One can only imagine the brawn required of those early barn builders! The earlier
"Old World" frame construction method was that of one timber hoisted atop
another one at a time, and was slower. The barn's huge sandstone masonry foundation is
typical of that used before the 1840's. Probably quarried nearby just off of Avalon Road,
in nearby Perry County, many of its stones weigh in excess of 1,000 pounds! Impressively,
they are still level. Indeed, the continuing levelness yet today of the entire barn, top
to bottom, is amazing! Other, later era, masonry work utilized finer detailed, smaller,
more easily handled stones. The comparative crudeness of the springhouse and stillhouse
foundation stones compellingly suggests that they were laid even earlier than the barn
itself.
The family cemetery's stone walls, however, resemble those of
the barn's. The earliest tombstone date it contains is 1820. A barn was the early farmer's
most critical structure, providing shelter for the all-important draft animals, other
livestock and harvested crops. Thus in early America it was normally built before other
farm buildings, even the house, and certainly before the cemetery, but then this family
was not typical. The old Winegardner barn's actual construction date is uncertain. It may
have been as early as 1807, but its architecture suggests circa 1825-1835.
Neither Jake nor Anthony left any children. After Jake's
passing in 1891, the Winegardner "Home Farm" went to his 'beloved nephew,' young
Herbert (1827-1903), his brother Absalom's son. Absalom, born in 1799 in Virginia, had
died in 1833 of cholera. Absalom's grandson, Amos Jefferson Winegardner (born 1869), in
turn lived in the home of his great-grandfather, Herbert, Sr. after the passing of his own
father, the younger Herbert. Locals say that more than one neighbor borrowed money of 'old
Jeff.' He had it to loan out, distilling being beneficial to him. He did not keep it in a
regular bank, but rather, according to lore, in his special hiding places. The "Home
Farm" was eventually passed on to Raymond, Amos' son. Dale, Raymond's brother, also
grew up on the home place, but obtained the adjacent farm by repurchase and other family
holdings by inheritance. The last Winegardner to live on family land, Dale, is still
widely remembered. Both brothers, and other family members, have left vintage graffiti
which has been discovered in various places in the old barn. In 1951 Raymond, desiring to
move to the city, sold the Winegardner Home Farm to Benjamin R. and Lew W. Finke,
brothers; my father, Ben, and Lew, my uncle. It is here that the pioneer's old barn stands
today.
Rushing Spring, home of the Winegardner barn became home of
WLRY 88|5 FM (WLRY.org ), as it came on the air in September, 1998.