Michelsen Farmstead

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Michelsen_Farmstead an entity of type: Thing

The Andreas Michelsen Farmstead was originally built as a two-room house in 1902 by Andreas himself. In 1912 an addition was added to the home, making seven rooms in total, and little has changed since. The homestead consists of a 1 1/2-story Victorian-style farmhouse with a wraparound porch, and various outbuildings including a barn, granary, calving shed, coal shed, machine shed, storage cellar, corrals and pens, and an outhouse. Landscape elements on the property include a dugout, cistern and filter, and garden. The farmstead is located at the corner of 2nd Avenue & 6th Street, on the west half of four blocks in the northwest corner of the National Historic Site of Stirling, Alberta.[1] rdf:langString
rdf:langString Michelsen Farmstead
rdf:langString Michelsen Farmstead
rdf:langString Michelsen Farmstead
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rdf:langString InternetArchiveBot
rdf:langString The restored Michelsen Farmstead.
rdf:langString Stirling Historical Society & Village of Stirling
xsd:integer 1912
rdf:langString January 2018
rdf:langString yes
xsd:integer 5332
rdf:langString Wood
xsd:string 49.498 -112.525
rdf:langString The Andreas Michelsen Farmstead was originally built as a two-room house in 1902 by Andreas himself. In 1912 an addition was added to the home, making seven rooms in total, and little has changed since. The homestead consists of a 1 1/2-story Victorian-style farmhouse with a wraparound porch, and various outbuildings including a barn, granary, calving shed, coal shed, machine shed, storage cellar, corrals and pens, and an outhouse. Landscape elements on the property include a dugout, cistern and filter, and garden. The farmstead is located at the corner of 2nd Avenue & 6th Street, on the west half of four blocks in the northwest corner of the National Historic Site of Stirling, Alberta.[1] The home remained in the Michelsen family until 1995 when the village, in partnership with the Stirling Historical Society, bought the homestead to turn into an interpretative center. Incentrethe homestead was registered as a Provincial Historic Resource and added to the Alberta Register of Historic Places.[1] The Stirling Historical Society has since restored the property to its original 19th-century style, and the farmstead is now a museum, depicting life as it was from 1900 to the 1930s. Each summer the Historical Society holds day camps for children and an old-fashioned harvest dance which is held on the grounds of the Michelsen Farmstead every October.
xsd:integer 1904
rdf:langString Museum
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xsd:string 1912
xsd:string 1904
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