Saturday, June 15, 2019
We had heard there are hiking trails at Newlin Grist Mill (Glen Mills, PA), but we ended up being tourists and taking the mill tour.
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Former Markham Station (1854) serves as the visitor center;
from here mill products were shipped on the
Pennsylvania Railroad’s Octorara branch to ports in NJ |
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Newlin Grist Mill (1704 as a custom mill to grind grains for a fee,
later expanded into a merchant mill where grains were purchased,
then ground and sold by the miller) operated until 1941 |
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The wooden water wheel with a diameter of 15.5 feet,
on a 22-foot shaft with a diameter of 24 inches |
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On the miller's level, with the grinding level above |
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Corn in the hopper above a spinning grindstone |
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The hopper sits on a horse and a "shoe" funnels the corn
into the "eye," a hole in the middle of the grindstone |
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Millstone crane for lifting and moving a millstone |
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The lower grindstone with tools for sharpening
the exacting pattern of edges |
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Up on the sifting level, the ground wheat
must be raked to dry out water that was
part of the wheat kernels |
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A sifter, where the product of the first sifting
was called "run of the mill" |
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Because Newlin Grist Mill is constructing
their own replacement water wheel,
they have a working millwright shop (KSS) |
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Millwright shop with a section of the curved wheel |
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Demonstrating the type of saw that was likely
used to cut pieces for the original water wheel |
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Bake oven |
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Orchard |
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Probably a bat house, and KEnt |
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Railroad bridge over Chester Creek (KSS) |
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An archaeological dig |
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Artifacts from the dig (KSS) |
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Water from the mill race fills several trout ponds |
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Fishin' |
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Reconstructed 18C McKinley blacksmith shop |
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The mill race goes underground
across the street from the mill |
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On the way home we stopped for lunch at Ye Olde
Concordville Inn (established in the 1770s as a tavern) |
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Broiled crab cakes made with their World Famous Recipe! |
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