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List of watermills in the United States

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A list of watermills in the United States.

Working mills

Alabama
Arkansas
California
Connecticut
Georgia
Illinois
Indiana
  • Beck's Mill, Becks Mill
  • Bonneyville Mill, Bristol. Built mid-1830s and still operates May through October (see Elkhart County Parks and Recreation)
  • Mansfield Roller Mill, Mansfield. Built in 1820. Currently operated by Indiana DNR.
  • Metamora Grist Mill, Metamora. Built in 1899 and restored in 1970. Produces high quality stone-ground corn meal.
  • Spring Mill State Park, Mitchell
  • Stockdale Mill, Roann
  • Bridgeton Mill, Bridgeton. Established 1823, family owned and operating.
  • Greenfield Mills, near Howe. Family owned and operating.
Iowa
Kentucky
  • Mill Springs Overshot Waterwheel located at Mill Springs Park. The current mill built in 1877 on the site of a previous mill. Currently owned and operated as a park by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. The wheel has a diameter of 40 feet, 10 inches, and a breast of three feet. Powered by 13 natural springs located beside the mill, it is thought to be one of the largest of its kind in the world. - Mill Springs
  • Wisenberger Mill, near Midway
Maine
Maryland
  • Wye Mill c.1682 The oldest continuously operating grist mill in the United States. Supplied flour to George Washington's Continental Army. One of the first grist mills to be automated by Oliver Evans. The Oliver Evans process equipment is still in use at the Wye Mill.
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
  • Sciple's Water Mill in Kemper County, built in 1790 and owned by four families over the next fifty years. The Sciple family bought the property in about 1840 and has kept it running ever since. This mill also ginned cotton and sawed lumber until the 1950s.
Missouri
Nebraska
New Hampshire
  • Littleton Grist Mill, Littleton
  • Sanborn grist and saw mill, Loudon now known as Sanborn Farm Mills
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Mingus Mill
  • Dellingers Mill, Bakersville, seasonally operational, water powered, 1867
  • Emmett Isaacs Mill, Surry County
  • Gwynn Valley Mill, Brevard
  • Linneys Mill, Alexander County, 1902
  • Mingus Mill, Cherokee
  • Old Mill of Guilford, Oak Ridge. Fully operational water-powered grist mill. Founded in 1767, moved 500 feet downstream to current location in 1819. According to legend, Revolutionary War British troops seized the original mill prior to the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in March 1781.
  • West Point Mill, Durham
  • Yates Mill, Wake County
Ohio
Oregon
  • Thompson's Mills, Shedd, OR, 1858, on the Calapooia River, now an Oregon State Heritage Site, Thompson's Mills State Heritage Site
  • Butte Creek Mill, Eagle Point, OR, 1872, Little Butte Creek
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
  • Boykin Mill, Boykin, an operating grist mill where meal and grits have been ground by water power for over 150 years.
  • Suber's Corn Mill, Greer, built in 1908 by Walter Hillary Suber. It was constructed on 100 acres (0.40 km) that was passed down from his father, James Ashfield Suber, who was a Civil War veteran. This was one of five mills within a 10-mile (16 km) radius in the early 1900s.
Tennessee
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin

Extant non-operational mills

Ruined, remnant, or partially preserved gristmills

See also

References

  1. "Grist Mill Activities & Tours". Franklin Creek Conservation Association. Retrieved 2018-10-02.
  2. "Home". grauemill.org.
  3. "Home". oldmillofguilford.com.
  4. "OHS - Places - Indian Mill". Archived from the original on 2010-04-07. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
  5. "After 323 years, will Kenyon's Grist Mill survive?".
  6. https://www.beckmanmill.org/
  7. "History". Archived from the original on 2014-11-06. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
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