There is a conflict over barns in New England. A man
named Ken Epworth, a New Yorker, has formed a business
called the Barn People, which specializes in
disassembling 18th-century and 19th-century barns and
reassembling them as attachments to expensive homes
elsewhere.
Locals are reacting angrily, accusing Epworth of taking
away their heritage. They want a little bit of New
England history, said Vince Kuharik, of Meredith,
New Hampshire, of those who purchase the old barns.
But its our history, not theirs.
Unfortunately, people such as Kuharik fail to see that it
isnt history thats being moved;
its a piece of property, and ownership of that
particular asset rests, rightfully, with whoever has
purchased it.
In the case of the barns, the purchaser/owner is a business
called the Barn People, and as soon as the deed is handed
over, the barn becomes the property of the business to do
with as it pleases.
No one is stopping New Englanders from purchasing these
barns themselves to prevent them from being moved away.
Clearly, the owners of the barns feel that they are of
little or no value in their present location and
condition, which is why they sell them to Epworth.
In a sense, then, Epworths business is actually
doing a good historical deed by purchasing,
restoring, and selling the barns to wealthy homeowners,
he is engaging in a form of historical preservation.
Obviously the locals dont see it that way. Fine.
They are free to purchase the barns themselves, and face
the responsibility of preserving history
themselves. This would require that they expend the
resources necessary to maintain these old structures,
just as Epworths Barn People are now doing.
Instead, they would rather browbeat Epworth for investing
his own resources in the buildings, which New Englanders
claim to love so much but often leave to decay and ruin.
One town is even using eminent domain to stop his
efforts.
The Barn People could just as easily have been a private
New England preservation society dedicated to the
ownership and upkeep of historical properties.
Ken Epworth should not be blamed for the failure of New
Englanders to fully understand the value of
their own history or for profiting from the
wisdom they lack.
Also see Historical Preservation and the Market.
Scott McPherson is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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