Difference between revisions of "South Berne Mill"

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==Location==
 
==Location==
Built on the site of the former [[Culver Cloth Mill]].  
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Built on the site of the former Culver Cloth Mill.  
  
 
==Owners==
 
==Owners==
  
*Elias Zeh,  (1839-1907) built the South Berne Grist Mill before 1880.<ref name="Northrup">[[Orlo J. Northrup]]</ref>. The Zeh operation had the capacity for grinding 20,000 bushels of grain a year.<ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>   
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*Elias Zeh,  (1839-1907) built the South Berne Grist Mill before 1880.<ref name="Northrup">[[Bio:Orlo J. Northrup|Orlo J. Northrup]]</ref>. The Zeh operation had the capacity for grinding 20,000 bushels of grain a year.<ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>   
*The grist mill burned, and in the early 1900s Charles Onderdonk (1866-1934) purchased the property and rebuilt the mill.<ref name="Northrup">[[Orlo J. Northrup]]</ref><ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>
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*The grist mill burned, and in the early 1900s Charles Onderdonk (1866-1934) purchased the property and rebuilt the mill.<ref name="Northrup">[[Bio:Orlo J. Northrup|Orlo J. Northrup]]</ref><ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>
  
 
Onderdonk also operated the [[b:South Berne Sawmill|South Berne Sawmill]], a clover mill, and a shingle machine.<ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>  
 
Onderdonk also operated the [[b:South Berne Sawmill|South Berne Sawmill]], a clover mill, and a shingle machine.<ref name="Our Heritage">[[Our Heritage]]</ref>  

Latest revision as of 14:54, 22 October 2012

Location

Built on the site of the former Culver Cloth Mill.

Owners

  • Elias Zeh, (1839-1907) built the South Berne Grist Mill before 1880.[1]. The Zeh operation had the capacity for grinding 20,000 bushels of grain a year.[2]
  • The grist mill burned, and in the early 1900s Charles Onderdonk (1866-1934) purchased the property and rebuilt the mill.[1][2]

Onderdonk also operated the South Berne Sawmill, a clover mill, and a shingle machine.[2]

Power

The main water supply was from a swampy area a mile above the hamlet of South Berne known as Mud Hollow Pond. A smaller dam at the mill site with a high stone bulkhead (still intact) was the direct power supply to the mill site. As this dam had a gradual sloping bottom it was used by churches for immersion baptism.

There was a small dam below this which powered the Andrew Sweet Mill.[1]

Onderdonk had an earthen dam built across the drainage stream of Mud Hollow Pond, which is now known as Onderdonk Lake.

Onderdonk used a steam Engine when the water supply was low.[2]

Sources