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  2. Pole building framing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pole_building_framing

    Poles, from which these buildings get their name, are natural shaped or round wooden timbers 4 to 12 inches (100 to 300 mm) in diameter. [4] The structural frame of a pole building is made of tree trunks, utility poles, engineered lumber or chemically pressure-treated squared timbers which may be buried in the ground or anchored to a concrete slab.

  3. John Patrick McNaughton Barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Patrick_McNaughton_Barn

    The John Patrick McNaughton Barn, also known as the McNaughton Barn or the Max Mirage View Farm Barn, is a 3½ story wooden barn located in Ottawa County near Miami, Oklahoma. Built on a rising hill in 1893 as a multi-purpose barn, the McNaughton Barn is still in use today at the Ankenman Ranch, a working cattle ranch .

  4. Adams Woodframe Grain Elevator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adams_Woodframe_Grain_Elevator

    The Adams Woodframe Grain Elevator is a grain elevator in Adams, Oklahoma. The elevator was built in 1926, the same year the community of Adams was established by the Tex-Co Grain Company. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (Rock Island) opened a line past the grain elevator in 1929, which linked Amarillo, Texas to Liberal, Kansas ...

  5. American historic carpentry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_historic_carpentry

    A type of trussed plank frame barn in Sweden is representative of some types in America, the lack of heavy timbers in the framing give it the name plank frame barn. Plank-framed barns [22] are different than a plank-framed house. Plank framed barns developed in the American Mid-West, such as the patente in 1876 (#185,690) by William Morris and ...

  6. James H. Bounds Barn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_H._Bounds_Barn

    The James H. Bounds Barn, in Marshall County, Oklahoma near Kingston, Oklahoma, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013. [1] [2]According to its National Register nomination, the barn "is an exceptionally well-preserved example of a four-crib log barn representing late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century farming and ranching in the Chickasaw Nation and ...

  7. Hooker Woodframe Grain Elevator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hooker_Woodframe_Grain...

    The elevator was built in 1926 by the Riffe & Gilmore Co. and operated by the Wheat Pool Elevator Company. Located along the Beaver, Meade and Englewood Railroad, which ran from the east at Beaver, Oklahoma to the west at Keyes, Oklahoma (northeast of Boise City), [2] the elevator served the local wheat