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The Hann
homestead is located at the intersection of route 417 and Barrett
Gulley Road. At the side of the house is the
Hann Cemetery.

The house
was built by Simeon Hand in 1840. Simeon was the son of Jacob Hand
and was born in Oxford, Conn. in 1811. He came to Andover in 1837
and lived in a log house until he built the house. He bought a
sawmill in Andover, built by Pete Bundy, in which to build the
house.
In 1840,
he built the house that still stands from pine trees which grew in
his timberland and were fashioned into lumber and shingles at his
sawmill. The house is 40ft. long and 28 ft. wide and has 17 rooms.
Downstairs there are five bedrooms, a kitchen with dinning-room
combined, one large living – room, a parlor, and an entrance hall at
the end of which a narrow winding stairway leads to the second floor
of the house. Upstairs there is a large sitting – room, six
bedrooms and a hall.
Adjoining
the house in the rear is a large woodshed 32 ft. long and 28 ft.
wide which was kept well supplied with wood throughout the year.
During one severe winter 75 cord of 3 ft. wood was burned in the
house. There are two large fireplaces on the ground floor are built
back to back in the middle of the house and the chimney serving
these fireplaces is 20 by 24 inches. Originally there were three
fireplaces downstairs and one upstairs. Later the upstairs
fireplace was token out. The irons which were used to hold the
kettles for cooking and the spear used for testing the meat that was
roasted over the fire, have remained in the fireplace to the present
day. (Unknown date)
A peculiar
thing in the house is that the chimney was built first and is not
attached t the house proper except where fireplaces made it
necessary. One could crawl through the attic and by a ladder
attached to the chimney work ones way down the chimney for the
purpose of pointing up and repairing.
There are
double porches which extend the full length of the house. The
windows are very old-fashioned with 20 panes of 7” X 9” glass to
each window. Some of the boards used in the house are 24 inches
wide.

There is a
cellar under the house and during Simeon’s time it was kept stocked
with several barrels of pork, beef and huge quantities of staple
food. Wheat was raised on the farm and taken to Dansville to be
ground into flour and kept in room upstairs over the kitchen. On
these trips to Dansville he drove a team of oxen, leaving at 3 A.M.
and returning the same day.
The house
has as many as 16 or 17 rooms, some of which are very large. The
bedrooms which slept Simeon and his wife Rachel Adams Hann, and
their 10 children are arranged around the outside edges of the
house. Each bedroom is furnished with a head-high “clothes rail”
where hooks were inserted on which to hang clothing.
After
Simeon’s death in 1876, his youngest son, Adelbert remained in the
home to care for his mother. In 1884 he married Eliza Updyke and
she remained there until her death in 1955 and then her daughter
Rachel remained there until her death in 1958, then her son Victor
lived there until November of 1961.
In
November of 1961 the property was purchased by Mr. Herald Ford of
Andover, N.Y. whose idea was to fix the place up and convert it into
an inn. The idea never materialized.
Then a Mr.
Henry Argentieri from Hornell, N.Y. was going to restore it and that
never happened.
Then at
some time a Mr. & Mrs. David B. Herr purchased the property and
have made it into a home again. They have done an excellent job of
it and should be commended for their effort.

photo by William A. Greene
This house
is over 165 years old and there are many stories that have been
associated with the house. We know that there was a stagecoach line
that used to run through Allegany County and it is said that the
Hann house was a stop. We can not prove that as there is nothing
written about the stagecoach line. It is also said that it was a
house used in the Underground Railroad, to move slaves from the
south to the north. Again this can not be proven as there is
nothing written in the history books. Some say it is haunted and
again there is nothing written to prove this either.
Just think
if this old house could talk, oh the stories it could tell.
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