Newlin Mill Complex
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Newlin Mill Complex
| nrhp_type =
| image = NewlinMills3.JPG
| caption = North side of the mill building
| location = U.S. 1 and Cheyney Road, Glen Mills, Pennsylvania
| coordinates = {{coord|39|53|25|N|75|30|22|W|region:US_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = Pennsylvania#USA
| built = 1704
| architecture =
| added = March 9, 1983
| area =
| refnum = 83002240{{NRISref|2009a}}
| designated_other1_name = Pennsylvania state historical marker
| designated_other1_abbr = PHMC
| designated_other1_link = List of Pennsylvania state historical markers
| designated_other1_color = navy
| designated_other1_textcolor = #ffc94b
}}
The Newlin Mill Complex, also referred to as The Newlin Grist Mill, is a water-powered gristmill on the west branch of Chester Creek near Concordville, Pennsylvania built in 1704 by Nathaniel and Mary Newlin and operated commercially until 1941. During its three centuries of operation, the mill has been known as the Lower Mill, the Markham Mill, the Seventeen-O-Four Mill and the Concord Flour Mill.Sellers, p. 21. In 1958 the mill property was bought by E. Mortimer Newlin, restored and given to the Nicholas Newlin Foundation to use as a historical park. Water power is still used to grind corn meal which is sold on site. The park includes five historical buildings, which were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983, and {{convert|150|acre|ha|0}} of natural woodland.{{cite web
| title =National Register of Historic Places - Inventory - Nomination Form
| work =National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania
| publisher =Commonwealth of Pennsylvania | date =
| url ={{NRHP-PA|H079286_01H.pdf}}
| format = | doi = | accessdate =November 13, 2009}}
History (1683-1739)
Nicholas Newlin was a member of the Religious Society of Friends and an Irishman who lived in the Quaker town of Mountmellick, in Queens County, Ireland. In May, 1683, Newlin, fleeing religious persecution, emigrated to Pennsylvania with his wife, Elizabeth, and three children: Nathaniel, Rachel, and John, on the ship Levee from Liverpool. In October, 1683 purchased the mill property from William Penn in Concord Township, about {{convert|10|mi|km|spell=in}} northwest of the town of Chester.
Newlin was a prominent citizen, serving on the province's governing body, the Provincial Council in 1686 and 1687, as a Justice of the Peace, and on the Courts of Chester County.Sellers, pp. 23-24.{{cite book
| last =Launey | first =John Pitts | title =First families of Chester County, PA, Volume 1
| publisher =Heritage Books | year =2008 | pages =176
| url =https://books.google.com/books?id=tiLay8Gx9UgC&pg=PA77 | doi =
|isbn=978-1-58549-015-8}}
Newlin's son, Nathaniel, married Mary Mendenhall in 1684. In 1685, Mary Mendenhall received additional land as part of a grant to her and her siblings.
Nathaniel and Mary Mendenhall built the present mill, the third gristmill in the township, in 1704. Nathaniel also served as a Justice of the Peace, and on the Courts of Chester County, and served in the Provincial Assembly from 1698 to 1722. Through Nathaniel's inheritance from his father, and the land Mary Mendenhall held, and by their purchase of {{convert|7750|acre}} that became Newlin Township, they became together one of the largest landowners in Chester County.Sellers, pp. 24-26. When Nathaniel Newlin died intestate in 1729, shortly after Mary Mendenhall died, the land was divided under Pennsylvania law among their children with the oldest son, Nicholas, receiving a double portion, and all the daughters and other sons, including a son named Nathaniel Newlin, each a single portion.
History (1739-pres.)
In 1739, Nathaniel's grandson via his son Nathaniel, Nathaniel Newlin III, built a house for the head miller. In 1742, William and Anne Trimble, the owners of a neighboring gristmill, built a house overlooking the Newlin mill. A mile to the west in the village of Concordville, Nathaniel's son Nicholas built the Nicholas Newlin House in 1742; which is listed separately on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1777, the Battle of Brandywine was fought within a few miles of the mill. General George Washington had ordered the removal of millstones from nearby mills to hinder the supply of British troops, but there are no records of the order's effect on Newlin Mill.{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20060830154134/http://www.brandywinevillage.org/1730.html Milling, the Revolutionary War, and Industrial Innovation]}}{{cite book
| last =Bodle | first =Wayne | title =The Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War | publisher =Penn State Press | year =2004 | pages =335
| url =https://books.google.com/books?id=-SnMfl_OPFgC&pg=PA47 |isbn=978-0-271-02526-1}} p. 47.
File:Newlins Mill Trimble House a.JPG
Southeastern Pennsylvania was the leading producer of grain in the colonial period and mills could be easily powered by the steep descent of the streams, called the Fall Line, in the area. By 1781 there were 127 gristmills in Chester County, which then included present-day Delaware County. The Newlin mill only served local and domestic needs and was known as a "country mill", rather than a "merchant mill" which would produce finer flour for urban and export markets.{{cite web
|title=Colonial Gristmill |work=ExplorePAHistory.com |publisher=Commonwealth of Pennsylvania |date= |url =http://explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=559 |format= |doi= |accessdate =November 13, 2009 }}{{cite book
| last =Smith | first =George | title =History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania: from the discovery of the territory included within its limit to the present time
| publisher =H.B. Ashmead | year =1862 | location =Media, Pennsylvania |page=[https://archive.org/details/historyofdelaw00smit/page/344 344]
| url =https://archive.org/details/historyofdelaw00smit }}
The Newlin family owned the mill until 1817, selling to William Trimble, Jr. Thomas Newlin, who died in 1811, had remarried after his wife's death. Disagreements between his two sets of children resulted in a judgment of $11,326.30 against his estate, forcing the sale of the mill.Sellers, pp. 27-28.
The Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Railroad was built through the property in 1859; this allowed the mill to market its flour in Philadelphia and Baltimore.The railroad was later known as the Octoraro Branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad. A railway station was built in 1868 and Samuel Hill bought the mill in 1869. In 1942 the mill stopped commercial production and the buildings were used temporarily as a bookstore and an antique store. In 1956, Nicholas's eighth-generation descendant, E. Mortimer Newlin, purchased the property and later formed the Nicholas Newlin Foundation to restore and preserve the mill.Sellers, pp. 32-33. Restorations were completed in 1962, and 1992.
class="wikitable" |
style="background: #E9E9E9"
|colspan ="7" style="background: #E9E9E9; font-size: 110%" | Ownership of Mill Site |
Ownership dates
|Owner (lifespan) | align="right" | |
Sep 24, 1683-1685
| Nicholas Newlin (1630–1699) | Bought {{convert|500|acre|ha|0}} from William Penn |
Apr 17, 1685-1729
| Nathaniel Newlin (1663–1729) | Given {{convert|250|acre|ha|0}} as a wedding present |
1729-1768
| Nicholas Newlin (1689–1768) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
1768-1811
| Thomas Newlin (1747–1811) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
1811-1817
| Benjamin Newlin (1784–1873) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
Jul 31, 1817-1829
| William Trimble (1766–1842) | Bought {{convert|26|acre|ha|0}}, mill and 2 houses for $9,005 |
1829-1835
| Abraham Sharpless (1748–1835) | Bought {{convert|26|acre|ha|0}}, mill and 2 houses for $5,500 |
1835-1869
| Casper Sharpless (1805–1865) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
Apr 21, 1869-1880
| John H. Hill (1799–1880) | Relative of the Newlins |
1880-1929
| Samuel Newlin Hill (1842–1929) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
1929-1942
| William W. Hill (1863–1943) | Inherited land and mill from his father |
Oct 27, 1942-1956
| Daniel I. Conlon | Intended to convert to a residence |
Mar 2, 1956-1960
| E. Mortimer Newlin (1898–1977) | 7th-generation descendant of Nathaniel Newlin |
Dec 2, 1960–present
| Nicholas Newlin Foundation | Founded by E. Mortimer Newlin to preserve the mill |
colspan ="7" style="background: #E9E9E9; font-size: 90%" | From Nicholas Sellers, Short History of Newlin Grist Mill, p. 22.{{cite book|title= Place, Memory and Time, Essays Commemorating The Tricentenial of the Nathaniel Newlin Grist Mill, 1704–2004 |publisher= Nicholas Newlin Press |year= 2004 |isbn= 1-59880-143-0 }} |
Buildings
=Mill=
The mill measures {{convert|35|ft|m|0}} wide by {{convert|70|ft|m|0}} long.{{cite web
| title =The Gristmill | publisher =Nicholas Newlin Foundation | date =
| url =http://www.newlingristmill.org/park/complex.htm | doi =
| accessdate =November 13, 2009 }} A date stone on an exterior wall is marked "Nathan'l Mary Newlin 1704." The dam and the half-mile mill race, which provides the water that powers the mill, were built the same year. The original grindstone was imported from France. The mill was built of fieldstone into a hillside: the north side two stories, the south side one story high. The mill wheel was originally outside the mill and was probably breastshot.Wallace, p. 7. It was reconstructed in 1976, weighs {{convert|1500|lb|kg|0}} and measures {{convert|16|by|4|ft|m|1}}, with 52 buckets. The water exits underground through the tail race and travels about {{convert|150|yd|m}} back to Chester Creek. The floors and mill machinery are supported by a hurst frame, an inner timber frame that is separated from the outer stone walls so that vibrations do not break the outer walls.{{cite web
| last=Woodfin | first = H. Dabbs
| title =Reconstruction of an 18th Century Mill | publisher =Nicholas Newlin Foundation
| date = | url =http://www.newlingristmill.org/millzone/article.htm | doi =
| accessdate =November 13, 2009 }} The process of grinding the corn may be viewed at the mill.
Sometime after 1817 William Trimble expanded the mill and enclosed the mill wheel. It ground about 60,000 bushels of corn per year at that time. Sometime before 1850 the mill was refitted according to the Oliver Evans automated mill design and began to grind wheat flour.See Wallace, p. 11. The date may have been 1818 with Evans participating in the installation on site. In 1850 owner Casper Sharpless purchased 20,000 bushels of wheat for $22,000 and sold flour worth $30,000.Sellers, p.33
In 1870 the following products were produced:
At that time the mill had four millstones and two wooden overshot water wheels with a {{convert|24|ft|m|adj=on}} fall, producing about {{convert|20|hp}}. A wood-framed upper story was added about 1890.Sellers, p. 37.
=Warehouse=
File:Warehouse Newlin Mill.JPG
The warehouse is a {{frac|2|1|2}}-story stone building to the east of the lower level of the mill. It was built by Nathaniel Newlin after he built the mill to use as a dry goods store. It now serves as the Foundation's archive.
=Miller's house=
Built in 1739 of stone, it is adjacent to the south side of the mill. There are two rooms on each of the two floors, with a fireplace in each room, and a beehive oven attached to the kitchen. A third story was added about 1860 and removed during a restoration in the 1960s. This house should not be confused with the Newlin Miller's House about {{convert|12|mi|km|0}} north in West Whiteland Township which was built in the early 19th century by William Newlin and listed separately in the National Register of Historic Places.{{cite web
| title =Pennsylvania Historic Resource Survey Form | publisher =Commonwealth of Pennsylvania | date =
| url ={{NRHP-PA|H064516_01D.pdf}} | format = | doi =
| accessdate =November 17, 2009 }}
=Trimble House=
(The image shown is of the main office, and not the Trimble House.) This house was built into the hill above the mill and the miller's house in 1742,{{cite book|last1=Ashmeade|first1=Henry Graham|title=History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania|date=1884|publisher=L.H. Everts & Co.|location=Philadelphia|page=[https://archive.org/details/cu31924006215655/page/n641 490]|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924006215655|accessdate=3 July 2017}} also with four rooms. It was expanded by 1765 to accommodate William Trimble's growing family. It has nine fireplaces, a {{convert|53|foot|m|0}} deep well and much of the original flooring, woodwork, doors, and hardware. The Newlin Foundation bought the house in 1998 and it is used as a private residence.
=Railway station=
The {{frac|1|1|2}}-story Gothic-style station was originally built in 1868–1869 by Samuel Hill. It served as a post office and polling station for the community of mill workers in the area. It burned down in 1890 and was rebuilt the next year, serving as a railway station until the 1930s. It is used now as the park office.
=Park=
The five original buildings form the core of a {{convert|150|acre|ha|0}} park, which is mostly natural woodlands. A 1710 springhouse from a local farm was moved to the park in the 1970s and a small barn was moved from northern Delaware to the area behind the miller's house. In 1965 a log cabin was constructed, which is used for meetings, receptions, and parties. A new 18th Century style blacksmith shop replica was constructed in 1975. Two ball fields are also included in the park.{{cite web
| title =The Park at Newlin Grist Mill | publisher =Nicholas Newlin Foundation
| date = | url =http://www.newlingristmill.org/park/walk.htm | doi =
| accessdate =November 13, 2009 }}
File:NewlinDam.JPG|The "Black Dam," built 1704
File:NewlinMillRace.JPG|Mill race takes water from the dam to the mill
File:NewlinSpillway.JPG|Spillway regulates waterflow
References
{{reflist|30em}}
Sources
Wallace, Antony F. C., "The Mystique of Old Mills", Ch. 1 in {{cite book|title= Place, Memory and Time, Essays Commemorating The Tricentenial of the Nathaniel Newlin Grist Mill, 1704–2004 |publisher= Nicholas Newlin Press |year= 2004 |isbn= 1-59880-143-0 }}
Sellers, Nicholas, "Short History of Newlin Grist Mill", Ch. 2 in {{cite book|title= Place, Memory and Time, Essays Commemorating The Tricentenial of the Nathaniel Newlin Grist Mill, 1704–2004 |publisher= Nicholas Newlin Press |year= 2004 |isbn= 1-59880-143-0 }}
External links
{{Commons category|Newlin Mill Complex}}
- [https://www.newlingristmill.org/ Newlin Grist Mill] - official site
- [https://millpictures.com/mills.php?millid=254&mill=Nathaniel%20Newlin%20Grist%20Mill Millpictures.com]
{{National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania}}
Category:1704 establishments in Pennsylvania
Category:Grinding mills on the National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania
Category:Mill museums in Pennsylvania
Category:Museums in Delaware County, Pennsylvania
Category:History museums in Pennsylvania
Category:Parks in Delaware County, Pennsylvania
Category:English-American history
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Delaware County, Pennsylvania