David Hanaford Farmstead
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The David Hanaford Farmhouse from the southeast
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Location | 8307 Cahill Avenue Northeast, Monticello Township, Minnesota |
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Coordinates | 45°16′16″N 93°50′50″W / 45.27111°N 93.84722°WCoordinates: 45°16′16″N 93°50′50″W / 45.27111°N 93.84722°W |
Area | 8.9 acres (3.6 ha) |
Built | 1870–c. 1900 |
Architect | David Hanaford |
Architectural style | Federal/No style |
MPS | Wright County MRA |
NRHP reference # | 79001273 |
Designated HD | December 11, 1979 |
The David Hanaford Farmstead is a historic farm in Monticello Township, Minnesota, United States. It was first settled in 1855 and features a farmhouse built in 1870 and a barn from around the same time. The farmstead was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 for having local significance in the themes of agriculture and exporation/settlement. It was nominated for being "an excellent example of an early Wright County farmstead developed by a pioneer family from New England."
When it was nominated to the National Register in 1979, the farmstead consisted of seven standing buildings, a building ruin, and the sites of four former buildings or structures. As of 2016, several of the supporting buildings have been demolished. As originally listed as a historic district, the 8.9-acre (3.6 ha) property consisted of a farmhouse, barn, granary, brooding house, machine shed, outhouse, and corn crib, plus the ruins of a tool barn and the traces of a log cabin, water well, silo, and windmill.
The 1870 farmhouse is a two-story, cubic building with a timber frame and red brick walls. It was designed in the Federal architecture style. It is topped with a hip roof and has a one-story frame wing at the rear which was built at the same time as the house. The barn, also contemporaneous to the house, measures 50 by 30 feet (15.2 by 9.1 m) and rises two stories. It has a mortise and tenon timber frame sheathed in vertical boards and covered in shiplap siding. The sliding double doors are topped with a multi-pane transom window. The barn has a gable roof and a wood-frame shed attached to the south end.