Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Early Ligonier Township farm yields trove of historic artifacts | TribLIVE.com
Westmoreland

Early Ligonier Township farm yields trove of historic artifacts

Jeff Himler
5940646_web1_gtr-Westmo250Patricia1-022623
photos: Jeff Himler | Tribune-Review
Steve Patricia takes a break in a log cabin on his Ligonier Township farm that was constructed using timbers salvaged from a 1795 structure.
5940646_web1_gtr-Westmo250Patricia2-022623
photos: Jeff Himler | Tribune-Review
Left: Steve Patricia shows an original hand-hewn American chestnut beam in the oldest section of his Ligonier Township farmhouse.
5940646_web1_gtr-Westmo250Patricia3-022623
photos: Jeff Himler | Tribune-Review
This bottle of bedbug poison probably was purchased in the 1800s. It’s among artifacts Steve Patricia discovered when he moved into his historic Ligonier Township farmhouse.
5940646_web1_gtr-Westmo250Patricia4-022623
photos: Jeff Himler | Tribune-Review
Steve Patricia holds an original American chestnut peg that was used in the construction of the farmhouse. The oldest section of the house is thought to be at least 200 years old.
5940646_web1_gtr-Westmo250Patricia5-022623
photos: Jeff Himler | Tribune-Review
Above: An original dwelling that is thought to be at least 200 years old is at the core of this expanded and remodeled house on Steve Patricia’s Ligonier Township farm.

Editor’s note: This is part of an ongoing series marking the 250th anniversary of Westmoreland County’s founding.

Planting seeds for crops was the aim of many settlers who arrived in Westmoreland at the time of its formation as a county 250 years ago.

Others were on a mission to plant seeds of faith.

Those two interests intersected on a roughly 30-acre farm in Ligonier Township, creating a legacy that is appreciated by current residents Steve Patricia and his wife, Helen.

“There’s a lot of pride in this area, and a lot of history that has been preserved,” said Steve Patricia, an artist who often depicts historical images.

The property was owned in the late 1700s by Robert Roberts, a Maryland native and traveling minister who eventually was selected as a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Religious services at one time were held in the farmhouse; Patricia believes the oldest section of the home has stood for at least 200 years.

He removed a drop ceiling to reveal the home’s original hand-hewn American chestnut beams. He’s also found long pegs of the same wood that were used in the dwelling’s construction and a wrought iron nail, which predated modern wire nails.

“There are so many people who’ve lived here over time,” Steve Patricia said. “I’ve saved just about everything I’ve come across.”

That includes a bottle of bed-bug poison that likely was purchased in the mid-1800s before being stashed in the basement.

Thousands of more objects from past eras came to light when Patricia invited a group of students from Pitt-Greensburg to complete archaeological digs on his farm — including the area around a spring that bubbles up at one end of the house. Some of the more interesting items that were uncovered include a pewter button and a clay pipe dating to the 1750s.

Patricia has the meticulously labeled items in storage but is wondering what to do with them in the long run.

“A lot of effort was made to procure them,” Steve Patricia said, noting he has yet to discover the location of the home’s former outhouse, where more discarded relics from the past are bound to be buried.

“There’s a lot more evidence still to be found,” he said.

Jeff Himler is a TribLive reporter covering Greater Latrobe, Ligonier Valley, Mt. Pleasant Area and Derry Area school districts and their communities. He also reports on transportation issues. A journalist for more than three decades, he enjoys delving into local history. He can be reached at jhimler@triblive.com.

Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.

Get Ad-Free >

Categories: Local | Westmoreland
Content you may have missed