I was out exploring west of the Delaware yesterday, and visited an abandoned property up in the hills to take photographs of the barns. Inside one of them I found an interesting sort of hoist mechanism, and although I grew up in Indiana and worked around farms and farmers, I haven't yet figured out what this is for. I'm thinking it has something to do with horses and tack. Anyway, here is the top part...
Note that it is wound such that pulling on one line raises the other. At the working ends of those two lines are crude iron hooks...
The mechanism does not look like it was built to take much weight, which is why I'm thinking it was for lifting saddles off of horses backs. Anyone have an alternative theory or explanation?
As a bonus, thought you guys would enjoy these two detail shots of the construction techniques used in the main supporting timbers of the main barn on the property, which is 3x or 4x the size of the one containing the mystery hoist.
Note the hand adze work to rough out these timbers, and the "rough and ready" way the builders made up the height difference between the two horizontal beams. It's lasted about 200 years, so I guess that was good enough.
This is my favorite detail shot: hand-crafted pegged mortise and tenon joints. There are structures like this rotting away all over the Delaware Water Gap NRA, most with signs on them advertising their ownership...
It should say "Warning: this irreplaceable colonial-era hand-built structure is being ignored by its owner, the U.S. Government."
Note that it is wound such that pulling on one line raises the other. At the working ends of those two lines are crude iron hooks...
The mechanism does not look like it was built to take much weight, which is why I'm thinking it was for lifting saddles off of horses backs. Anyone have an alternative theory or explanation?
As a bonus, thought you guys would enjoy these two detail shots of the construction techniques used in the main supporting timbers of the main barn on the property, which is 3x or 4x the size of the one containing the mystery hoist.
Note the hand adze work to rough out these timbers, and the "rough and ready" way the builders made up the height difference between the two horizontal beams. It's lasted about 200 years, so I guess that was good enough.
This is my favorite detail shot: hand-crafted pegged mortise and tenon joints. There are structures like this rotting away all over the Delaware Water Gap NRA, most with signs on them advertising their ownership...
It should say "Warning: this irreplaceable colonial-era hand-built structure is being ignored by its owner, the U.S. Government."