Rural mills in Maine were similar to those in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and New Brunswick. They were usually were constructed alongside small and middle-sized streams and brooks. As elsewhere, dams were of fieldstone, earth, or logs. Wing’s Mills on the Messalonskee Stream had a log crib dam. John Damren’s nearby sawmill had an earth dam reinforced with planks. Daniel Sargent’s Seguendedunk Stream sawmill had a stone dam, the relicts of which were measured at just over 2 meters high in 1988 but that were reported to have been almost 5 meters high a century before; it was 50 meters long and almost 2 meters thick. The dam at White’s Mills on the Kenduskeag Stream was 3.6 meters high and 68.5 meters long and created a 1- to 1.5 hectare millpond. Maine country millhouses were wood-frame structures, usually built just below the dam but sometimes directly on top of it. Damren’s wooden millhouse was two-and-a-half stories on the downhill side and one-and-a-half stories on the uphill, with a shingled roof and clapboarded walls. Wing’s Mills (also of wood) was one-and-a-half stories and resembled a large barn. In addition to the milldams, which were built to raise the water level so that it could be channeled into the raceways, which then carried it steeply downhill to turn the mill wheels, most Maine millers also erected crude water storage dams upstream to pond additional water – often by flooding bogs or raising the water level in natural lakes.14
When the first industrial mills were built in the late 1700s and early 1800s, they would utilize the same technology as the country mills – milldams, millponds, sluice gates, raceways, and mill wheels – but on a much more massive scale.
1 Louis C. Hunter, A History of Industrial Power in the United States, 1780-1930 (Charlottesville, VA: 1979), 1: 116-118.
2 Thomas Jefferson to Brissot de Warville, August 16, 1786, in Papers of Thomas Jefferson, ed. Julian P. Boyd, et al. (Princeton, NJ: 1954), 10: 262; Timothy Dwight, Travels in New England and New York, ed. Barbara Miller Soloman (Cambridge, MA: 1969), 1: 379-380.
3 W. Winterbotham, quoted in Hunter, History of Industrial Power, 2-3.
4 William Wyckoff, “Frontier Milling in Western New York, Geographical Review, 76 (1986): 85.
5 Report of the Manufactures of the United States at the Tenth Census (Washington, DC: 1883), vii.
6 Hunter, History of Industrial Power, 4.
7 Wyckoff, “Frontier Milling,” 82.
8 Graeme Wynn, Timber Colony: A Historical Geography of Early Nineteenth-Century New Brunswick (Toronto: 1981), 87.
9 Steven A. Spaulding, “The Groveland Mills on Johnson’s Creek,” Essex Institute Historical Collections, 119 (1983): 192.
10 Hunter, History of Industrial Power, 4.
11 Wynn, Timber Colony, 87.
12 Marion Nicholl Rawson, Little Old Mills (n. p.: 1935), 91-96, 162.
13 Personal inspection by Jamie Eves, November 1988.
14 Jamie H. Eves, “Shrunk to a Comparative Rivulet: Deforestation, Stream Flow, and Rural Milling in 19th-Century Maine,” Technology and Culture, 33 (1992): 45-46.