Parker Training Academy Dutch Barn
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Parker Training Academy Dutch Barn | |
West profile and south elevation, 2013 | |
| Location | Red Hook, NY |
|---|---|
| Nearest city | Kingston, NY |
| Coordinates | 42°1′5″N 73°49′3″W / 42.01806°N 73.81750°W |
| Area | less than one acre |
| Built | 1790[1] |
| NRHP reference No. | 07001035[2] |
| Added to NRHP | October 3, 2007 |
The Parker Training Academy Dutch Barn is located at that institution on Turkey Hill Road in the town of Red Hook, New York, United States. It is a wooden structure built in two stages between 1790 and 1810. In 2007 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[2]
It is one of the last New World Dutch barns built in the Hudson Valley;[1] by the time of its construction that building type had mostly been displaced by newer barn designs. It was extended northwards by a bay within 20 years of its construction. While it has been possible to determine this information, the original builder remains unknown. Since the mid-20th century the building has been on the campus of Parker Training Academy, part of the New York State Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS).[1]
Exterior
The barn is located at the academy grounds on the north side of Turkey Hill Road (Dutchess County Route 56), in the eastern portion of the town, roughly one quarter-mile (400 m) from the boundary with the neighboring town of Milan), an area known as Cokertown. Terrain is gently rolling, with wetlands amid low hills, as the Hudson River valley begins to yield to the Taconic Mountains. Lakes Kill, a tributary of the Saw Kill, flows south to the west, just below its source at Spring Lake. Warackamac Lake is to the southwest on the town line. The area is rural in character, with a mix of cleared areas for farms, houses on large lots and woodlands.[3][4]
The building itself is on the east side of the academy's driveway, which runs north from Turkey Hill, about 150 feet (46 m) from the road. To its west the driveway widens to include parking spaces on either side; the buildings of the rest of the academy complex are to the north. A side road south of the barn climbs gently up a hill to the academy's watersphere on a nearby wooded ridge at the town line. Northeast of the barn is a small retention pond, which drains to Lakes Kill, partially fenced off on the north and west, with a large mowed lawn beyond between it and the nearest building.[1][4]
Like all New World Dutch barns, the Parker Academy barn is a three-by-four-bay (30-by-42-foot (9.1 by 12.8 m)) wooden frame structure standing on a stone foundation sided in clapboard and topped by a front-gabled roof sheathed in standing-seam metal roofing nailed to the original wooden shingles. At each corner are plain cornerboards. The roof eaves slightly overhang the east and west sides but are flush on the others, with a plain fascia below. Several lightning rods are along the roof crest.[1]
The south (front) facade has 12-foot-high (3.7 m) double Dutch doors of vertical battens with cast iron strap hinges, four per section, in the center. In the middle of the upper section of both is a six-light square window, covered over for security purposes. There is evidence of a pentice having been located above the entrance in the past, and a dovecote having been in the gable apex.[1]
To the east of the main entrance is a sliding wooden door, also made of vertical battens. Two large signs warning against unauthorized entrance to the barn are conspicuously displayed near the building's corners. Security is complemented by two modern floodlights at the roofline.[1]

With the exception of one former door in the southwest corner, now boarded over, the east and west sides of the barn have no fenestration. A sign with the number "6" assigned to the barn by the academy for management purposes, is next to it. Near the north end of the west side, structural deterioration has exposed the foundation slightly, and some modern concrete blocks used to shore it up are visible. Some deterioration, and missing clapboards, are visible on the east side. The north (rear) elevation has a similar double Dutch wagon door with a modern poured concrete ramp due to the doors' slight height above grade.[1]
Interior
Inside, the barn's distinct structural system is visible. Five bents support the roof and walls; the two on the north and south ends support the studwork for the clapboard siding and entrance framing. They are braced twice: at the intersection of the post and tie beams, and again above the tie beam. Both upper and lower ties are connected to the anchor beams by mortise joints and pegs. A purlin-plate runs across the top of the bents, also mortised and braced. Below the tie beams another set of longitudinal braces links the bents, parallel to the purlin-plates.[1]
Thick tongue and groove boards provide the threshing floor in the barn's center aisle. A raised wood platform, its floor level with the longitudinal braces, has been added to the east aisle. Below it is a concrete trough, and there is a small enclosure in the northwest section over the exposed, deteriorated section of the foundation.[1]
Two sets of struts between the outer wall and the inner bents serve to delineate the side aisles. The outer walls are supported by braced uprights, and their plate in turn supports the rafters, which run continuously from there to the apex, staggered from the corresponding uprights. Above the rafters are the roof boards to which the original shingles and modern standing-seam metal is nailed. Most of the rafters are rough-hewn, lapped and pegged together at the apex; the newer ones in the northern quarter are only butted and nailed together there.[1]