Montana's Homestead-Era Stone Buildings

Montana’s Homestead-Era Stone Buildings

Scattered across the plains of central Montana are the remnants of countless homestead-era stone buildings built in the late-19th and early-20th centuries by long-forgotten European immigrants. Some are mostly standing while others are little more than the rectangular-shaped ruins of a stone foundation from some long forgotten homesteader’s house or barn.

Old-barns

These buildings were typically built from fieldstone that homesteaders cleared from their fields and mixed with low-grade lime mortar made on site. Although most of the original homesteaders gave up and moved on, the ruins of their stone buildings still remain as reminders of a difficult life.

Homestead-Fieldstone-5525Modern Reproductions

We are frequently asked to re-create the appearance of these homestead-era buildings, but with stone that works in modern construction. Our favorite stone for this looks is Homestead Fieldstone.

Homestead-Fieldstone-123931We collect Homestead Fieldstone from piles of stone that generations of homesteaders cleared from their fields. These same piles were the stone source for the old homestead-era stone buildings. The difference is we now sort and chop the fieldstone to fit into a modern 6″ thick masonry wall.

We also cut Homestead Fieldstone into 1″ to 1 1/2″ thin veneer as show below. This can be applied to walls that lack the bearing capacity for full thickness stone.

Homestead-Fieldstone-thin-veneer-8213-copy