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Mill on the Bellamy River

The
many falls of the Bellamy River were seen as great resources of water power to
run mill machinery. As early as 1650, sawmills and gristmills existed here, and
over the next 3 centuries dozens of small industries thrived in these waters.
The types of factories included an iron foundry, flannel, cotton, and woolen
mills, cloth dressing and carding mills, yarn manufacturing, nail and knife
factories, a machinery shop, a brewery, a hosiery factory and a sewing machine
manufacturer, a bone grinding mill, a shuttle and axe handle factory, color
shops and bleacheries, a railroad box car factory, sash, blind, and door
manufacturers, clapboard mills, a shingle, cob, and lathe maker, and a cider
mill. During their heyday in the 1840’s, the yarn and cloth manufacturers would
pay women workers 50 cents a week plus board for producing 40-60 skeins, or
$1.00 for weaving 30-50 yards of fabric at home in a hand loom.
From the 1988 Heritage Walking Tour booklet
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