
Plymouth Grist Mill

by Brian MacLean
Title
Plymouth Grist Mill
Artist
Brian MacLean
Medium
Photograph
Description
The Plimoth Grist Mill
Nestled alongside Plymouth Town Brook, and just a short walk from the waterfront and Mayflower II, the Plimoth Grist Mill tells the story of the grist (corn grinding) mill built by the Pilgrims in Plymouth Colony. After more than a decade of laboriously grinding corn by hand in wooden mortars, the colony authorized the construction of a water-powered corn grinding mill on Town Brook in 1636. Colonist John Jenney was given permission to run the mill and to take a portion of the corn that was brought for grinding as a payment or "toll." After his death in 1644 John Jenney left the mill to his wife Sarah. Sarah, and later their son Samuel, ran the mill until 1683.
The current Plimouth Grist Mill is a reproduction of the 1636 mill, and was completed in 1970. Many of the parts (the stones, spindle, and stone furniture) are from the early 1800s and were salvaged from a mill near Philadelphia, PA.
The Plimoth Grist Mill is a working mill that uses water power to mill organic corn into delicious, freshly ground cornmeal on our 200 year old French Buhr millstones
Uploaded
June 1st, 2016
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Viewed 2,090 Times - Last Visitor from Romeo, MI on 06/09/2023 at 9:41 AM
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