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Mills
of Greene County....
The following information
about the mills in Greene County, for the most part, has been abstracted
from three principle sources: The History of Greene County,
1883, by Holcombe and Adams (H&A); Personal Reminiscences,1914,
by Martin Hubble (Hubble); and Past and Present of Greene County
Missouri, 1915, by Jonathan Fairbanks and Clyde Edwin Tuck.
(F&T)
Determining the exact
number of mills that have been in operation in Greene County is
difficult and confusing due to the fact that the same mill may have
gone under different names depending on the successive owners. On
some occasions a mill was relocated and assumed a different name.
Bass Mill
Near the Pomme de Terre
river and the pretty village of Fair Grove, in Greene County, Missouri,
may yet (in 1915) be seen the ruins of what in its day was the most
useful mill in the state of Missouri, and few, if any, mills in
the world have had a more attractive history then the one which
may there be seen in the last stages of decay. But there is yet
enough of the crumbling pile to prompt the traveler to ask its history,
and this is the story he learns:
Early in the year 1858
Sampson Bass, who then, as now, was one of the most enterprising
citizens of the Southwest, concluded that the advancement of the
times warranted the building of a steam flour mill at the place
mentioned. The country was rich in resources and the soil yielded
abundant harvests of the finest grain, but there was no modern mill
in that territory to make flour for its inhabitants and the markets
of the world. Sampson Bass thought a steam mill would pay, and so
he set out to build one. What an undertaking that was can not be
measured by the rules governing such an enterprise today. (F&T,
p. 151)
After months of hard
work and many mishaps the mill was completed and the people from
all the countryside came to see, for the first time in their lives,
the operation of a steam plant. That was in the year 1859. (F&T,
p. 152)
As time went on people
came to realize that they could depend upon the Bass mill to operate
in good times and bad. This was particularly demonstrated during
the 1859-1860 drought that shut down water powered mills all over
Southwest Missouri.
Sampson Bass tried to
maintain the neutrality of his mill during the Civil War and was,
with few exceptions, able to do so, making flour for both sides
until the Confederates were forced out of Southwest Missouri into
Arkansas.
A post office was established
in 1863 at the mill with the name Bassville. Then came two grocery
stores, a blacksmith shop, a dry goods store and potter's shop.
In 1867 Bass sold the mill to James Gray who moved the machinery
to another location. In the meantime a steam mill had been established
in Springfield.
Cannefax Mill
Chesley and Benjamin
Cannefax built a mill on Walnut Creek in 1832, but it never attained
much importance or notoriety. (H&A, p. 877)
Cason's Mill
In those days we went
to Cason's Mill, where the James River bridge is now located near
Galloway. The Cason Mill is the oldest mill that I know of. (Hubble,
p. 8)
Evans Mill
Robberson Township. A
grist mill was built by Joseph Evans, and he ventured to erect a
frame dwelling house, and for years it was the admired of all admirers,
everyone being curious to know how much such a building cost. (H&A,
p. 916)
Friend Mill
In 1832 or 1833, Augustine
Friend built a corn-cracker mill at what is now (in 1883) known
as Jones Spring on Section 27, R 21 or four miles east of Springfield.
This mill was pretty well patronized. (H&A, p. 877)
Augustine Friend, one
of those driven out in 1822 and returning in 1830, had a mill at
the large spring on Section 27, T 29 R 21, about five miles east
of Springfield. This was in 1832 or 1833. This spring was afterwards
the site of Henderson Jones' distillery and still bears the name
of Jones Spring. (F&T)
Fulbright Mill
In 1832 a mill was erected
by William Fulbright on a site near the head of the Little Sac.
(H&A, p. 141)
Disputing the distinction
claimed for old Jerry Pearson's mill, in the eastern part of the
county, it is claimed that the first mill erected within the present
borders of Greene County was built by William Fulbright, in section
3 T29 R22, on the Fulbright farm, now (1883) occupied by his grandson,
W. D. Fulbright. It was a "tub mill," and ground for customers
living fifty miles away. Fulbright afterward built another mill,
or rather, a millwright named Randolph did for him, but it would
not work, and was "no good." Afterwards, in 1844, his
son, John L. Fulbright, put mill machinery in the same building,
that turned two run of buhrs, until 1859, when he tore down the
old mill, put up a new one, and added a carding machine, but had
only one run of buhrs. The mill is still running, and is on the
head waters of the Sac (1883). The building is 44 by 18 feet in
size, and is a two story frame. Of Fulbright's old mill, old William
Jenkins used to say that when the water was low the mill-wheel would
mutter out, "Fulbright and Lasley, Fulbright and Lasley",
over and over, signifying that it would grind only for Fulbright
and his neighbor Lasley; but when the water was high, the wheel
would rattle away merrily, "everybody, everybody, everybody!"
(H&A, p. 876-877)
Another mill was built
at a very early date (I have never been able to learn the exact
time), by William Fulbright, just below the great spring flowing
from under a bluff on Little Sac, some two miles and a half north
of Springfield, on Section 3, T 29 R 22, and which is now the source
from which the Springfield Water Company draws the supply for the
city. This mill, with some later improvements, was standing and
operating as late as 1870, and I think some years later. I have
stood by its great overshot water-wheel and heard the whirling of
its old fashioned mill stones myself. (F & T)
Gibson's Mill
The early histories of
Greene County do not mention the Gibson's Mill on Wilson's Creek,
the site of which is now within the boundaries of Wilson's Creek
National Battlefield.
Archaeological studies
were begun at the site of the mill as well as the Gibson house by
National Park Service personnel August 23, 1966. The appearance
of the mill was then reconstructed based upon the remains that were
uncovered during the excavation that include remnants of the dam,
headrace, wooden timbers in the water that survived a fire that
destroyed the mill at some point, wooden turbine housing, mill stone
fragments, and portions of the mill stone foundation and chimney
footing. The archaeological report may be reviewed at the Park Visitor
Center Library.
The mill was located
on the east bank of Wilson's Creek. The dates of construction and
abandonment are unknown. It was in existence on August 10, 1861,
the date of the Civil War Battle of Wilson's Creek, as evidenced
by reports of the battle. Mr. John M. Gibson is thought to be the
original owner and builder, but there are those who say the mill
was later owned by a Reuben Rose and when by the name of Rose Mill.
A grandson of Reuben Rose has stated that his grandfather owned
the Gibson's Mill at the time of his death in 1881 and that he assumed
ownership as the result of default of a loan that had been made
to Mr. Gibson. It was not until the 1870 census that Mr. Gibson
identified himself as a miller. In the 1860 census he identified
himself as a wood carder. So discrepancies remain as to the dates
of construction of the mill and its owners.
Goodnight Mill
The Goodnight Mill was
located about 25 miles northeast of Springfield on the Ernest Mullings
property north of Fruitland near the Greene-Polk County line. Not
only was there a mill but a post office, drug store, general store
and blacksmith shop. The original mill burned during the Civil War.
The second mill washed out. A third mill was constructed on the
site in 1914. A gasoline engine was installed o power the mill in
1935 and continued until 1942 when the mill was abandoned.
Hackney Mill
Hugh Hackney, Old Uncle
Hugh Hackney, lived out on the Sac and had a mill and the meal and
flour that came from Hackney's mill sold like dollars, for there
wasn't any doubt about its purity. (Hubble, p. 79).
Hunt Mill
Hunt's mill is located
on Section 22, T30. There is here a general store, recently established.
Johnathan Hunt is the proprietor of the mill, which is turned by
the water from the springs before mentioned. (H&A, p. 899)
Franklin Township. The
township abounds in springs, and these and the branches of the Sac
supply it with plenty of water. On Section 22, T30, there are two
fine springs sending out a large volume of water, with a fall of
forty feet in less than 200 yards, and affording plenty of water
and power to turn a mill of two run of buhrs. (H&A, p. 895)
Ingle Mill
A man named Ingle settled
near where the bridge now stands (1883), at the crossing of the
James on the Ozark Road, and there erected what some claim was the
first mill in Southwest Missouri. (H&A, p. 129)
Historical Marker # 4,
NW 1/4, NE 1/2 NE 1/4 Section 21, T 28N, R 21W, Galloway Quad. First
mill site in Southwest Missouri. The marker was placed near the
northwest corner of the Old Ozark bridge (just west of present-day
bridge over US 65) just south of Galloway. On a recent visit to
the site, marker was not located. Text on marker reads: Site of
First Dam and Mill erected by-------Ingle, 1882. Osage Indians forded
here on their main trail to White River hunting grounds. Marker
erected 1921 by Kiwanis Club of Springfield Mo. The mill was established
about the time of Thomas Patterson's settlement in Greene County,
by a man by the name of Ingle. Remnants of the old dam, visible
for many years are now covered by the backwaters of Lake Springfield.
The ford at this point on the river was the crossing place for the
Osage Indians on their trail every fall and spring from their villages
on the Osage and Missouri Rivers to their hunting grounds on the
White, James and Arkansas Rivers. The grist mill was of vital importance
in the establishment of a settlement. The mill probably was one
of the first operations established along with a blacksmith shop,
church and school. The grinding of grain into flour to make bread
historically is one of the basic industries of a community. (From
the historical markers list published in the 1950s by the Greene
County Historical Society).
The plentiful water power,
running to waste on every Ozark creek, river and spring branch,
at one suggested to the first comers the utilizing of some of this
waste energy to grind their corn, and later to saw their timber
into lumber. We have seen that among those who came in from the
direction of Arkansas, in 1822, and who so soon had to vacate because
of the prior rights of the Delawares, there was one, a Mr. Ingle,
who is recorded to have built a mill on the James River, at about
the old bridge over that stream on the Ozark Road. This mill was
probably operated by power obtained from a wing-dam, for evidently
anything approaching a regular dam sufficient to restrain the James
at that point was far beyond the ability of a few pioneers at that
time. Long after the writer came to Greene County in 1868, there
was the remains of an old dam of this sort, at the ford just below
the old bridge. This I have been told was the remains of Ingle's
work. (F&T)
Ingram Mill
S. N. Ingram's mill,
on the James, was blown down (Cyclone of 1880). (H&A)
Sidney N. Ingram. This
gentleman is the son of Martin and Annie A. (Howard) Ingram, and
was born July 15, 1832 at Wilson, Tennessee. His parents came to
Greene County, Missouri in December, 1834, where Sidney received
his education, attending school until nearly of age. He taught school
for several years and in 1857 taught in Collin County, Texas. In
1859 he and A. G. McCracken built a mill on the James River and
ran it in partnership until Mr. McCracken's death in 1878. Mr. Ingram
and his sons now run the mill and have fitted it with the latest
and best improvements and make the best grades of flour (1883).
(H&A, p. 761-762)
In company with Mr. Rountree
on his journey from Tennessee was Sidney S. Ingram, who settled
in Springfield, on East Walnut Street, just north of which he erected
a cabinet and wagon shop. Mr. Ingram remained in the city a number
of years, and afterward removed to a farm about one and one half
miles southwest of town, after which he removed to the place on
the James, where, in company with F. C. Howard, he erected a saw
and grist mill. there he remained until his death, which occurred
about the year 1847, August 9. (H&A, p. 146)
Sidney Ingram at first
settled in Springfield, or where Springfield was to be. He here
built a cabinet and wagon building shop. In a few years he moved
to a farm a short distance south of town, and afterward to the location
on the James where in company with F. C. Howard, he built a grist
mill, which, with its successors, have continued to the present
day, and always as "Ingram's Mill". At this mill Mr. Ingram
died in 1847. (F&T, p. 138)
Campbell Township. Martin
Ingram was one of the old settlers of east Campbell Township. Coming
to Springfield in 1834, he lived one year in the town, and in moved
to a farm in Section 2. He did a large amount of mechanical work
in the days of the early history of the county, and built several
mills. (H&A, p. 875)
John's Mill
William and Martha Robinson
Johns came to Greene County from Robberson County, Tenn. as pioneers
in 1840. A watermill, known as Johns Mill, was built on the Sac
River in 1855 by William Johns. William Johns died during the Civil
War, but his son, Robert T. Johns continued operating the mill.
Robert T. Johns was born March 4, 1838 in Robberson County, Tennessee,
and was only two years old when his family came to Greene County.
He helped haul the pine lumber from Arkansas to build the mill and
then received his training as a millwright from his father. In 1872
he built his own mill near the site of the one built by his father.
The mill was a two story building setting on a high foundation on
the south side of the Sac river and west of the bridge. A dam across
the river about one half mile east of the mill formed a mill pond.
The water going over the dam continued down the river while the
water at the south end of the dam was directed into a millrace and
under the mill to a deep hole and the waterwheel. The mill machinery
was on the first floor and the grain bins on the second. the mill
was operated by several different individuals until sometime after
1920 when it was torn down by Moses Copeland and the lumber used
for his own house. In 1899 weather flags began to be flown above
the mill to provide those who could see the flags weather information.
(Greene County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 50, 1986)
Jones Spring
The Yoakum Mill was then
in existence, but there was no mill at the Jones Spring at that
time. Old Uncle Bennie Bass here at Beaver Gap had a corn cracker,
which consisted of two little stones of about a foot or 18 inches
across, and those old stones were lying about there in that neighborhood
a few years ago. But neither the Fulbright nor the mill at Jones
Spring had been built at that time. The Carson Mill is the oldest
mill that I know of. The next mill to be built was at the Jones
Spring. (Hubble, p. 8)
Lawson Fulbright
Mill
But neither the Fulbright
nor the mill at Jones Spring had been built at that time. The Cason
Mill is the oldest mill that I know of. The next mill to be built
was at the Jones Spring and also the Lawson Fulbright Mill. (Hubble,
p. 9)
Marshall Mill
Wilson Township. The
settlers had their grinding done at Marshall's old mill, on the
James. No sawmills were in existence here and all wooden articles
or implements used were hewn out with an ax. (H&A, p. 685)
Old John Marshall, who
owned the famous mill at the mouth of the Finley, had an old fat
squaw for a wife. Marshall did not leave with the Delawares, (October
1831), but went the following spring in 1832. (H&A, p. 722)
A man by the name of
Marshall also came with them, (James Wilson), being married to a
squaw, with whom he lived until his death, which occurred about
the time the Indians were leaving here, and his widow and orphans
went to the Territory with their dusky companions. Mr. Marshall
had taken the old mill which had formerly been abandoned by Mr.
Ingle, and removed it down the river to a point near the mouth of
Finley Creek, where he had commenced a plantation. (H&A, p.
131-132)
Mr. Miller too tells
us that the first grist was ground at a little wing-dam mill, operated
by John Marshall, on James River near the mouth of Finley. This
man, Marshall by the way, was a "squaw man" living with
the Indians until his death, just before they finally removed from
he region. His mill was the same that Ingle had put up on the James,
and had been bought by Wilson and moved to the lower location when
Ingle was forced to vacate his claim. (F&T)
In those days (early
days) neighbors were few and far between, but everybody was friendly
and willing to divide the last mouthful. The first grist of corn
was ground on a little wing-dam mill that Old John Marshall had
on James, near the mouth of the Finley, although Jerry Pearson had
a little rattle-trap of a mill some nearer, but it was hardly competent
to grind for his own use. (H&A, p. 153)
Prior to mill building,
corn had to be beaten in wooden mortars with a pestle, and these
were used to some extent for a long time in preference to the little
"one-horse" mills of the new county. (H&A, p. 153)
Franklin Township. The
first mill visited was at the mouth of the James, or near where
Ozark now is, in Christian County. Marshall's old mill, on Finley,
was also visited, while very often the old mortar and pestle were
resorted to for corn meal. The first grist mill built in the township
was a steam mill, put up in 1858 on Section 16, T30. On the same
section, on Sac River, Dysart and Headlee built and operated a saw
mill, in 1848. The mill stood near the southwest corner of the section.
(H&A, p. 897)
Pearson Mill
And striking James fort
twenty miles east, thence down to Jerry Pearson's where he had built
a little water mill at a spring just below the Danforth place. (H&A,
p. 137)
Taylor Township. The
township is well watered by springs. Pearson creek, which rises
at the Powell Spring, in the southern part of Section 5, was water
enough as a rule to turn a mill, and was so used by old Jerry Pearson,
when he first came to this country in 1828 when the Indians were
still here. (H&A)
One of the very first
mills in all Southwest Missouri was that built by old Jerry Pearson,
somewhere between the years 1828 and 1831. The Delaware Indians
were in possession of the county then, and from them Mr. Pearson
obtained permission to build his mill. Pearson was from Tennessee.
He located near the large spring which is near the residence of
Mrs. Letitia Powell, on Section 5. The water from this spring forms
Pearson Creek, and it was this creek that turned the mill. Some
idea may be gained of the volume of water that flows from the old
Pearson Spring (now called the Powell Spring (1883) by this circumstance.
Pearson also set up a distillery afterwards, along in the '30's
somewhere and this establishment was near the mill; but the first
still-house in the township was set up by John Burden, at the Burden
Spring. The hollow where it was situated is still called "still-house
hollow." Pearson's mill was an important institution in it
day. It ground the corn of the setters for a radius of several miles.
The Campbells, the Fulbrights, the Rountrees, and others from Springfield
came here for their grinding, until the little horse-mill was started--which
was afterwards owned by Judge Hedrick. The capacity of Pearson's
mill was not large--perhaps fifty bushels a day, and quite often
its patrons remained over night waiting their turns. (H&A, p.
704)
Jeremiah Pearson came
to what is now the southern part of Jackson Township, Greene County,
a year or two later, and settled on the stream that afterwards bore
his name, and not long afterward built a mill, which disputes for
the distinction of being the first to this section of the State.
(H&A, p. 126)
Jerry Pearson also built,
at a very early date, a mill below the spring that is at the head
of the creek that still bears his name. We have seen that Mr. Miller
speaks rather contemptuously of this "mill", stating that
it would hardly do Mr. Pearson's own grinding. (F&T)
Perkins Mill
The next mill accessible
(Walnut Grove) was Carey & Perkins' or McElhanon & Perkins,
on Clear Creek, down where now is Boone Township. (H&A, p. 611)
Dr. Constantine Perkins
settled on Clear Creek in Section 4, and had a mill there, probably
the first in the Township, long known as Mcelhanon's & Perkins'
mill. The second mill put up in the Township was on the Sac, about
the year 1848. (H&A, p. 624)
Whinnery Mill
The Whinnery Mill site
is located near Ash Grove, Missouri.
Wommack Mill
The Wommack Mill, the
only operational mill in Greene County, was built in 1883 in Fair
Grove, Missouri, by Joe Hines and John Boegle. In 1923 ownership
of the mill eventually passed to Clifford Wommack who operated the
mill, along with his wife, Ethyl, till 1969. The Fair Grove Historical
and Preservation Society purchased the mill and began the restoration
process using some of the original machinery and the buhrstones.
The mill is a steam-operated mill.
Yoakum Mill
The Yokum Mill was then
in existence. (Hubble, p. 8)
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