The Sunday Farm in Berks County |
Yesterday was one hot
Sunday with the sun beating down on anyone
around here that wanted to do just about anything outdoors. So, the
husband suggested it was the perfect time to do a roadtrip (in the air
conditioned car of course!) and check out hex signs on some of the barns in the
Berks County, Pennsylvania countryside.
Dating back to at least
the nineteenth century, hex signs are the beautiful geometrical designs
that decorate Pennsylvania barns. A
misnomer is they are created by the “Plain Dutch,” which are your more
conservative Anabaptist groups such as the Amish and Conservative Mennonites. Instead, many non-conservative Anabaptists and others are actually their creators. Regardless of who paints them they take some
serious skill and patience to create, and the Greater Reading Visitors Center
offers a self-guided Berks County Hex Barn Art Tour that stretches over 40 miles through
part of Pennsylvania Dutch Country off of I-78 and Route 222. It
should be noted; however, that their subtitle on the tour is “Get lost in
history,” and our odometer reading was over half-a-mile in difference from
theirs by the end of the tour (and also their direction at 38.7 miles that
tells you how to get back to I-78, should be turn RIGHT onto Route 737S).
A few of the hex signs along the tour. |
I applaud the Greater Reading Visitors Center for making a tour of this quickly vanishing folk art form; however, we quickly noticed that the tour may need a little updating. Not only were some of the road directions and mileage counts off (and a bridge out), but some of the hex signs on the tour were fading, non-existent as the barns had been resided, or manufactured metal signs screwed to the side of metal barns and wooden buildings. The metal ones (which were on the very first barn on the tour), in our opinion, are “not real hex signs” as I can buy them in a gift shop along I-78 if I cared to own one.
James H. Adam Farm in Berks County |
Also on the tour are painted murals decorating four of the barns alongside the hex signs on Virginville Road.
All-in-all it was an interesting tour through the Berks County farmland even with many of the hex signs being of similar design, but they were beautiful none-the-less. I will give warning to anyone taking the tour that Route 143 was a busier, winding road than expected, especially for a Sunday, and that you might want to look over our changes in the directions (found below) to help you out with some of the things we noticed to be a little off.
A few changes in the link's directions to help others along:
5.4 - "Dreibelbis Farm (on left)" was supposed to have hex signs, but we couldn't see any. If someone does see some, please let us know!
6.6 - "On left, rear" was supposed to have hex signs, but we couldn't see any from the road we were travelling on, on the tour.
19.0 - "Dreibelbis covered bridge (on left)" is actually on the right, not the left. (It also has a metal hex sign on it too)
25.8 - "Sicher Farm (on left)" was almost completely obstructed by the trees. Perhaps a winter view would allow you to see the hex signs better.
35.1 - "Cross Rt 143 to Stoney Mountain Road." The road is actually Stoney Run Valley Road, and currently the bridge is out! The Ontelaunee Farm (at 35.5 miles) is before the bridge and the Wiesner Farm (at 37.3 miles) is after the bridge. Take the detour and you'll actually see something else that wasn't included on the tour that we found really cool!
38.7 - "Turn left onto Rt 737 S" is really a right turn, unless you want to see the above barn art, then by-all-means, turn left! (The above art will then be on your left-hand side).
I'd love to hear what others think that visit the area and decide to take the tour! Since I grew up seeing hex signs in Pennsylvania Dutch Country, it's not as "new" to me as it might be to some.
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