Paoli Mills
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The Paoli Mills is an early mill complex on the Sugar River in Paoli, Wisconsin, including the remains of a sawmill built in 1849 and a largely intact flour mill begun in the 1860s. In 1979 the complex was added to the National Register of Historic Places. With


History

In 1849
Peter W. Matts Peter W. Matts (June 20, 1814 – July 2, 1903) was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. Biography Matts was born on June 20, 1814 in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. In 1842, he married Helen R. Dickson. They had seven children. Matts and his w ...
founded the hamlet of Paoli by building a sawmill on the Sugar River. He constructed a wooden dam upstream from the mill and dug a millrace channel a half mile long from the dam to his mill, producing a ten-foot head of water. Matts was at the time Sheriff of
Dane County, Wisconsin Dane County is a county in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the population was 561,504, making it the second-most populous county in Wisconsin. The county seat is Madison, which is also the state capital. Dane County is the ...
and would later be a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. The original sawmill was a wooden structure on the north side of the millrace. Only some of the structural beams remain from that original sawmill. In the 1860s brothers Bernhard and Francis Minch, immigrants from Bavaria, came to work at the mill. They eventually took over the mill from Matts and in the 1860s they built the 3-story stone flouring mill that sits on top of the millrace. In 1870 they milled 22,000 bushels of grain and sawed lumber in the sawmill. The sawmill ceased operation around 1877, but the flour mill was upgraded and expanded, and other Minches took over the operation. One of them,
Oscar F. Minch Oscar F. Minch (November 16, 1868 – September 12, 1953) was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. Biography Minch was born on November 16, 1868 in Paoli, Wisconsin. He attended high school in Madison, Wisconsin before graduation from what ...
, also became a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. The Minches' stone section of the mill has walls of coursed limestone rubble, three feet thick at the base. Each floor up, the wall becomes six inches thinner, forming a ledge on which the floor joists rest. Much of the milling machinery is intact. In the basement are three Leffel turbines: 20, 30 and 40 horsepower. On the first floor are two E.P. Allis roller mills from the 1880s, and a "Midget Marvel" multi-stage milling machine manufactured about 1900 or 1910. On the 2nd floor are E.P. Allis purifiers from the 1880s, and on the 3rd are E.P. Allis
flour dresser A flour dresser is a mechanical device used in grain mills for bolting or flour extraction which is the process of separating the finished flour from the other grain components following milling. The milling of grain into flour has been termed th ...
s from the 1880s. In 1938, Paul Fetherston bought the mill complex and used it for its original purpose for several years before he and his family converted it into a warehouse for their feed and seed business. The mill complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 and on the State Register of Historic Places in 1989.


References

{{reflist Grinding mills on the National Register of Historic Places in Wisconsin Warehouses on the National Register of Historic Places National Register of Historic Places in Dane County, Wisconsin Sawmills in the United States Flour mills in the United States Limestone buildings in the United States Industrial buildings completed in 1849