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SWAG Ash
or hickory
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Always seems like a long shot, IDing wood from photos, unless it is glaringly obvious, and usually it isn't. Here's a couple of links that might help to sort out if it is chestnut though-
http://web.utk.edu/~mtaylo29/pages/Ident...estnut.htmhttp://www.wood-database.com/lumber-iden...-chestnut/Good luck!
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Can't really see the bark well enough, but this is a pic of riving strips off an Ash log.
Ash properties Ohhhh based on what I see I say Ash, probably White.
Just to throw in most barns were built close to a convenient area and the closest wood that was destined to be cleared was used for the construction. Hopefully one of them would be a wood that could tolerate ground penetration simply from a rot standpoint. Beams, and structure, as well as siding would be whatever was left. It was rare you found a "Chestnut barn" unless all the trees there were Chestnut. Dragging logs is heavy work, and most of those guys were simple farmers, not timber framers. They just wanted something up to put tools, and animals, and harvested crops into
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GW
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Pine / Fur ... I bought some reclaimed lumber from a New England factory built in 1886. Spent last week milling it to size and it looks exactly like your pictures. They sold it as "old growth pine". It smells like pine and mills like pine.
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Would help to also see face grain but the end grain looks like pine or fir.
Gary
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The picture is of a piece of a main beam. There is no bark on it. It is just dust and dirt.
This piece came from a rotted beam and is quite dry.
I do not see any pores or fleck in the end grain. I'll get another piece and see if I can get a better photo of the face grain. It doesn't look like pine or fir to me, but I'm not that knowledgeable in identifying wood. The rings sure are tight in this piece.
We do have a lot of ash in the area now, well that a may not be true as the emerald ash borer is killing many trees. I'm not sure what the major species was in 1890. I do agree they would have used what was on hand. These are all hand hewn beams.
These beams are over 20' long and 8 to 10" square. You don't see that today very often.
Thanks for every ones input.
Chris