Every farmer loves a good old-fashioned barn. Perhaps one of the most interesting barns remaining in Nebraska is located in Gage County near Filley.
The Elijah Filley Stone Barn, the largest limestone barn in Nebraska, is the only surviving structure left from Filley’s successful Cottage Hill Farm, established in 1867 by Elijah, his wife, Emily, his father, Ammi, and his sons, Fitch and Hiram.
At first, the family lived in tents on their hilltop homestead, but over time, they decided not only to build permanent farm and home structures, but also to build them to be aesthetically pleasing and to last the test of time.
Prominent producer
Renting his first farm ground, by the spring of 1869, Filley finished tilling most of his own land and planted a windbreak and orchard. He was a prominent farmer and stockman in those early days, taking advantage of the development of the railroad in the vicinity in 1870 to ship cattle to market.
So, when the Panic of 1873 struck the region, along with severe drought and grasshoppers, he hired local residents who were out of work to help build his limestone barn, which was completed in November 1874 after 88 days of work.
Filley’s father, Ammi, quarried the stone. Emily hauled it to the building site, and Elijah laid the stones himself. The large, unique barn is built into an embankment, and it displays unusual use of arched openings for the windows.
By 1881, Filley was shipping more than 500 rail-car loads of cattle and hogs. He was a director on the board at First National Bank of Beatrice, cattle exhibit superintendent at the Nebraska State Fair and a member of the State Board of Agriculture for many years. From 1880-81, he served as a member of the Nebraska House of Representatives, long before the state went to a Unicameral legislature.
STILL STANDING: Now preserved by the Gage County Historical Society, the barn can be viewed from the road at any time, and private tours of 10 or more people can be scheduled through the Gage County Historical Society Museum in Beatrice.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, in 1977 the barn was willed to the Gage County Historical Society by owner Edwin Pedersen, with over 3 acres of surrounding land and money for restoration.
Today, the barn is preserved by the historical society, and can be viewed from the outside at any time during the year. Private tours of 10 or more people can be scheduled through the Gage County Historical Society Museum in Beatrice.
View the barn from the road at 13282 E. Scott Road, Filley, Neb. A harvest festival is held at the site every October. Learn more at gagecountyhistory.org.
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