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Showing posts from 2008
Meadow Run Grist Mill, Monticello, Virginia
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This summer, we headed to Virginia to visit Monticello. We really enjoyed friends, family and good food. After eating at one of the local restaurants we found a really nice water wheel next door, so I took a few pictures of it. The inside was really nice but I didn't manage to take any pictures of it. After leaving I wish I had. Oh well, the outside pictures are really great! A little history about this water wheel: Meadow Run Mill is part of the Michie Tavern (circa 1784) complex, moved, and reconstructed, the Meadow Run Mill, once located at Laurel Hill, Virginia. Plans for the mill were drawn up in 1764, and construction began in 1770, but the mill structure was not completed until after the American Revolution. The mill operated until 1958. In 1974, the Meadow Run Mill was purchased and moved to this site by owners of Michie Tavern (circa1784). The addition to the left of the first floor stone foundation is a gift shop. The mill has one of the best examples of a complete cas...
Graue Mill - Oak Brook, Illinois
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Frederick Graue was born in Germany, came to the United States and settled in Fullersburg, Illinois. He purchased land and began to build a waterwheel gristmill. It took five years to construct using bricks made from clay taken from the Graue farm and fired in a kiln near the site, and white oak timbers cut from a tract along the I & M canal near Lemont. The four huge one-ton buhrstones used for grinding were imported from the coast of France. The large gristmill was finished in 1852 and was used to grind the wheat, corn and other grains produced by local farmers. The mill was a major center of economic life during the 19th century and was also used by Fred Graue to hide runaway slaves on their journey to freedom in Canada. President Abraham Lincoln reportedly visited Graue Mill during a trip from Chicago to Springfield. Three generations of the Graue family operated the mill for 60 years until modern milling methods rendered the old mill obsolete and the building was abandoned. Th...
Finch Foundry Sticklepath Devon, UK
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Finch foundry is a tourist attraction in Sticklepath Devon, UK and here we have one of the working water wheels on location. The Foundry is owned by the National Trust and they have regular demonstrations available. This water wheel is not your normal mill, rather it powers a forge to produce mining and agricultural tools for the surrounding community. Today there are three water wheels driving large tilt hammers and grindstones.
Hopewell Waterwheel Powered Furnace National Historic Site
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Ice Frozen on Waterwheel of Mabry Mill - Meadows of Dan, VA
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