Chatfield Farmstead Explained

Chatfield Farmstead
Coordinates:41.3936°N -73.0433°W
Architecture:Gothic Revival, Italianate
Added:March 15, 2010
Area:4acres
Refnum:10000061

The Chatfield Farmstead is a historic farmstead at 265 Seymour Road in Woodbridge, Connecticut. Developed in the late 19th century, it includes a particularly well preserved period barn.[1] The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010. It is currently operated as the Bladen Valley Farm.

Description and history

The Chatfield Farmstead is located in far northwestern Woodbridge, at the northwest corner of Seymour Road (Connecticut Route 67) and Bear Hill Road. It is set 4acres of land, surrounded in part by farmlands historically associated with it. The main house, a Gothic Revival frame structure is set near the street corner, and the barn is set just to its north. The house is a rambling structure with multiple roof gables, a projecting window bay with decorative panels, and Stick style applied woodwork in some of the gables. It was built about 1880 for Henry Chatfield, who inherited the land from his father. The farm property was sold out of the Chatfield family in 1923, and the farmstead was subdivided from the bulk of the land in 1976.

The barn is a three-level bank barn, measuring about 65feetx48feetft (xft), with its long axis perpendicular to the road. Although this size is large in comparison to other surviving barns in the area, it is but 1/3 of its greatest size. It was greatly reduced in size in the 1970s, when a portion added in support of a dairy operation was removed.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Town Plan of Conservation and Development. Town of Woodbridge. 2018-07-16.
  2. Web site: Bladen Valley Farm. Connecticut Barns. 2018-07-16.