A Barn Built for the Work of the Farm
Standing along West Griffith Road near Hudson, Iowa, the Robert and Kathy Yuska barn reflects a period when farm buildings were engineered with both practicality and longevity in mind.
Built in 1940, the barn was originally used to shelter dairy cows and horses—animals that formed the backbone of many Midwestern farms during that era. Two cupolas rise from the roofline, each finished with a weathervane—a cow on one, a horse on the other—marking the barn’s working past. Over the years, as agriculture changed, the barn adapted along with the farm itself, later serving as a swine farrowing and early weaning facility.
Like many barns across Iowa, its purpose transformed, but its presence on the land remained constant.
For more than sixty years, Robert diligently cared for the farm and the buildings that supported it. In order to preserve the structure for the future, he replaced the original wooden roof with durable ribbed metal—an update that allowed the barn to continue standing strong against Iowa weather.