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5.6. SR 06-07-2004
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5.6. SR 06-07-2004
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<br />(6)Elk River Milling Company Flour Mill (See Figures 5 and 6) <br />A new Elk River Milling Company was incorporated in 1907 by a group of men from <br />Massachusetts. The officers of the company were George E. Putnam as president and <br />Charles H. Hartwell as secretary/treasurer. Putnam was director of the Middlesex Trust and <br />Safe Deposit Company in Lowell, Mass. and Hartwell was the director of the Lawrence <br />National Bank and trustee of the Lawrence Savings Bank in Lawrence, Mass. Members of <br />the Milling Company board of directors included Henry K. Webster, Gilman Harnden, and <br />George C. Jackman, all bankers and businessmen from Lawrence, Mass, M.L. Welch was <br />appointed manager of the mil1.73 The new flour mill was built by W.F, Chadbourne and <br />completed in October 1907 at a' cost of $40,000. It was sixty by sixty feet and four stories <br />(fifty-six feet) high. The mills capacity was 350 barrels of flour per day and 50 barrels of rye <br />flour per day. <br />The following description of the mills machinery was published in the Sherburne County <br />Star News: <br /> <br />"On the first or main floor of the mill the grinding, packing, weighing and <br />shipping will be done. Here also is the farmers' exchange, office, etc. The <br />machinery consists of five double stands of 9 x 30 and three double stands 9 <br />x 24 rolls for grinding wheat; two double stands 7 x 14 rolls for grinding rye; <br />one 2-pair high 9 x 24 feed rolls; one 3-high roller mill for grinding <br />screenings; three Silver Creek flour packers and one bran packer; Fairbanks' <br />hopper scale, 100 bushels capacity, for weighing wheat from the cars as well <br />as from teams. On the second floor are four double-sieve middlings <br />purifiers; two No. 15 Perfection dust collectors; one shorts duster, one Prinz <br />milling separator, tempering bins, packer bins, etc. On the third floor are <br />located two 6 x 12 and one 4 x 17 center drive square sifters for bolting <br />wheat flour; one 1 x 10 sifter for rye flour; four 20 x 18 differential reels; one <br />receiving separator; two wheat scourers; one rye scourer. The fourth floor <br />contains five dust collectors; one 50 foot conveyor for distributing wheat to <br />the storage bins; also the heads of 45 elevators, which extend from the <br />basement up through the various floors. The entire machinery equipment <br />was furnished by the Nordyke and Marmon Company and is the most <br />modern and complete ever built by this leading mill furnishing house.,,74 <br /> <br />Tbis mill was also powered by the Elk. River with one 48 inch Victor turbine that drove <br />the flour mill and one 36 inch American turbine that drove the rye and feed machinery. In <br />November 1907 a spur track was built from the main railroad line to the flour mill, It <br />separated from the main line between Proctor and Oxford Avenues and curled southwest to <br />the flour mill (see section on spur track).75 In 1911 the mill was employing five people,76 <br /> <br />29 <br />
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