John W. And Erena Alexander Rogers Keeney Farm
History
Jonathan B. Keeney was born in Lyme, Connecticut in 1815, and he purchased the land on which this farm stands in 1835. In 1846, he sold the land to his brother John W. Keeney, who was born in 1810 in New London, Connecticut. In about 1865, John hired local builder Riley Butrick to construct the farmhouse. In about 1875, John's son Joseph Keeney planted the first apple orchard on the property. Joseph was disinterested in the business management of the farm, preferring horticultural pursuits, so he left the management to his sister Emma and his three children: Frank, John R., and Ruth Keeney.
John R. Keeney was the driving force behind the farm management. He was born in 1882 and later moved the Chicago to become a salesman. In 1916, he returned to the farm and introduced a substantial amount of new innovation to the farming process. The farm became one of the largest producers of fruit in the area, and he installed cold storage barns in 1922. In 1923, he married opera performer Dorothy Bladon Elton, and the couple renovated the farmhouse in 1926.
Refrigeration units were installed in the 1930s, and the farm grew Christmas trees, eventually instituting a "pick your own" sales model. Some of the landscape features surrounding the house, including the retaining wall along M-50, were built from 1926 to 1950. Frank Perry died early, John R. Keeney bought out his sister Ruth for ownership of the property in 1963. The farm passed in trust to his sons, John William Keeney and Frank Perry Keeney. In 1980, John William became sole owner of the farm.
Description
The farm consists of 256 acres (104 ha), which includes the farmhouse, fields, woodlands, a pond, and an apple orchard. The majority of the property — all but 10 acres (4 ha) — has been owned by the Keeney family since it was first settled in 1835. The farmhouse stands on a small hill, and a fieldstone-trimmed concrete retaining wall runs in front of it.
The house is a two-story Upright and Wing structure with a fieldstone foundation and clapboard siding. Traces of Greek Revival details remain, including narrow corner pilasters, the wide frieze band below the cornices, and the side and transom lights framing the front entrance. The upright portion of the house is three bays wide with a shallow pitched roof. The wing section is three bays wide on the ground floor and two on the second; it also has a shallow roof.
References
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 11, 2009. Archived from the original on July 25, 2008. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
- ^ State of Michigan (2009). "Keeney, John W. and Erena Alexander Rogers, Farm". Archived from the original on May 5, 2012. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Gladys Saborio; Susan Kosky (January 2001), NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES REGISTRATION FORM: Keeney, John W. and Erena Alexander Rogers, Farm