Preface
Not long ago nearly
every
rural community in Southwest Virginia had a grist
mill, and oftentimes
one mill house enclosed both a grist and a flour mill.
Oftentimes, they
served as gathering places for the men of the
community, especially on
Saturdays. Nearly all were water powered. The overshot
wheel type
predominated,
because even a brook in the hills could be turned
through a flume and
made
to spill on the big overshot wheel. This type also was
the most
picturesque.
However, turbine power wheels were especially used in
large creek or
river
mills where it was necessary to empound water with
dams.
In order to
preserved
as much history as possible of these mills, Emory L.
Hamilton collected
what information he could about as many of them as he
could, and L. F.
Addington photographed them.
The Wynn Mill
Located west of
Jonesville,
Lee Co., VA, just off highway 58, known today as the
Wynn Mill, but in
earlier days as the Browning-Wynn Mill.
The mill was built
sometime
after 1863 and was then only two stories high. The
third floor was
added
about 1898, when the rolling Mill Machinery was added
for making flour.
Not only did this
mill
serve residents of Lee County, but some came from
Tennessee and
Kentucky
to mill. The mill operated until sometime in the
1930's and was then in
possession of John C. Wynn.
Dr. James G.
Browning,
a medical doctor and builder of the mill was born in
Russell Co., VA,
July
27, 19827. Died at his home at the Methodist Camp
Ground, Jonesville,
VA,
January 17, 1896. He married Martha Ann Farley, who
was born April 23,
1829 and died January 11, 1896.
John Calhoun Wynn,
who
last operated the mill was a son of Acles Porter Wynn
and Alafair
Ledford,
and was born in Harlan Co., KY, December 24, 1861,
died at the Camp
Ground
in Lee Co., VA, August 21, 1940. He married Henrietta
Browning at the
old
Browning home just opposite the mill. Henrietta was
born September 1,
1866
and died January 22, 1947.
Most, if not all the
machinery
is still intact in this old mill, but the building is
rapidly
deteriorating.
The Ball Mill
Located on the south side of Route 58,
just
west of Rose Hill, in Lee Co., VA.
Built by Moses S.
Ball,
about 1878. There was once a water operated saw mill
on the north part
of the building. The wheel of this mill is the
horizontal type
"turbine-wheel".
The mill remained in the Ball family until 1935, when
it was sold to
Joe
Cowan, who continued to grind meal at this mill for
sometime afterward.
The original mill
house
which was part log and part frame was torn down by Mr.
Cowan, and the
present
building erected on the old foundation. The original
machinery, mill
wheels
and burrs of the original mill are still intact and in
operational use
today, even though the old mill has been silent for
several years.
The Gibson Mill
On Indian Creek,
west of
Ewing, in Lee Co., VA, and upstream a short distance
from the old
Wireman
Mill stands the fast decaying Gibson Mill. Built by
the Gibson family
and
managed by them for most of the years of its
operation.
J. H. Humphrey, J.
J.
Gibson and J. N. Gibson replaced the original dam
which was made of
logs
with the present dam of limestone rocks, and built the
present building
around 1910. This mill was a success from the
beginning and made money
for its operators. Around 1917 it was operating full
blast.
Different
individuals
have operated the mill among them was A. M. Clark, B.
F. Wail, a Mr.
Profitt,
A. M. Blakemore and perhaps others. Blakemore was the
last to operate
the
mill and perhaps operated it longer than anyone else.
Wireman's Mill
On Indian Creek in
Lee
Co., VA, west of Ewing, and only a short distance
downstream from the
Gibson
Mill.
Built by a Mr.
Wireman
sometime prior to the Civil War, and a skirmish
between Confederate and
Unon soldiers took place around this old mill during
the Civil War
which
is locally referred to as "The Battle of Wireman's
Mill."
The original mill
dam
was made of logs and the mill was run by a large
wooden "under shot"
wheel.
The mill was sold to
W.
H. Pridemore, commonly known as "Uncle Billy" who in
turn sold it to W.
P. Nash, who was a grandson of Mr. Wireman, the first
owner, and Nash
was
a bachelor. In 1921, Nash replaced the old log dam
with a concrete dam,
and erected the present frame building, the original
being of log. Both
a grist and flour mill, but never a success for
reasons unknown, and
never
made money for its operators. It was remodeled and
converted to a
rolling
mill and Nash's nephew, Carroll Johnston from
Knoxville, was the
Miller.
This attempt was another failure and for several years
afterwards the
old
mill operated only one day a week grinding feed for
livestock.
After Nash's death
the
mill was sold at auction to a Mr. J. D. Hurst, who
turned it into a
furniture
factory, which was also a failure.
The building is now
owned
by a Mr. Willard Brooks, and has at time been used as
a tenant house,
room
shaving been built on the side of the mill. When I
visited the mill in
1967, some disgusted tenant has painted on a wall, "We
Democrats can't
live here." Recently the old mill has been repaired
and a very
attractive
log restaurant has been built and opened nearby as a
tourist attraction.
The Bush Mill
The Bush Mill on
Amos Branch
in the Copper Ridge section of Scott Co., VA, is
sometimes called the
Bond
Mill. It is now owned by the Scott County School Board
and is used by
F.
F. A. students as a tobacco barn.
Valentine Bush and
his
wife Nancy Gose moved from Russell County and bought
land, and the
first
mill was either built by them or was already on the
land they bought.
The
original mill was destroyed by fire, and the present
mill was built by
Bush about 1896 or 1897. The builders were W. T.
Frazier, Stephen and
William
Bush, sons of Valentine.
The Machinery, part
of
which is intact was purchased from Tyler and Tate of
Knoxville, shipped
by rail to Gate City, and hauled by log wagons to the
mill site by J.
R.
Frazier and Jim Bush.
The mill now has a
large,
metal overshot wheel, but the original was a wooden
wheel built by
James
and Franklin Stewart. The sluice way that carried
water to the wheel is
no longer standing.
Limestone rock to
build
the foundations was hauled from Copper Ridge and the
mill race dug
along
side the foot of a hill for some five hundred feet
represents a
stupendous
labor job, the mountain base being an out cropping of
limestone.
The mill was once
owned
by S. H. Bond, hence the "Bond Mill."
Valentine Bush, the
first
owner also had a water powered sawmill upstream from
the mill and on
the
stream below the mill he operated a Carding Machine.
Valentine Bush,
born
in 1809 is said to have lived to be 105 years old.
In 1866, a 16 year
old
son of Valentine Bush had taken a horse to water at
the fork of Amos
Branch
and while sitting on the drinking horse a shot was
fired from ambush
and
the young boy tumbled from the horse into the waters
of Amos branch.
The
assassin fled and was never caught. The stone at the
grave of this boy
in the old Nickelsville Cemetery has an epitaph which
reads: "He fell
at
the hands of an assassin."
Duncan Mill
This landmark
mill was
blown away in the Rye Cove tornado of 1929. It was
built by John
Duncan,
who came into Scott Co., VA around 1835, built the
mill and his home on
Cove Creek in the edge of Rye Cove. The mill was a log
structure and
ground
both wheat and corn. John Duncan operated it until his
wife's death in
1857 when he turned it over to his son-in-law George
W. Johnson who ran
it until his death in 1866.
Johnson had the log
mill
torn down and employed Pinkney Carter and George
Peters, both noted
millwrights,
to build a new mill. Carter designed a three story
mill with improved
equipment
for cleaning wheat. The new mill was completed about
1860, just prior
to
the out break of the Civil War.
This mill flew the
Confederate
flag and ground flour for the Confederacy all during
the Civil War.
Grain
was hauled in from wherever available, stored and
guarded by
Confederate
soldiers.
The flour left the
mill
by wagon and ox-drawn wagons for such places as the
Confederate
encampment
at Pound Gap in Wise County on the Virginia-Kentucky
line.
The mill was also a
recruiting
station for the Confederacy. On Saturdays rallies were
held and
speeches
given to encourage enlistment in the Confederate Army.
In 1917 the third
story
of the mill was torn off and converted again into a
two story building
and rolling mill machinery added for grinding wheat,
which was still in
use when the mill was destroyed by a cyclone on May 2,
1929.
Mr. J. F. Johnson of
Fort
Blackmore told the writer the following story:
"I have heard my father speak of John
Duncan
standing in the door of the mill on April 15, 1865
when a Negro slave
that
once belonged to Washington Salling ode up and said,
'Good morning,
Uncle
John. How is your health? Uncle John have you heard
any good news
lately?'
He replied; 'Nothing except that it ha been reported
General Lee
surrendered
last Friday morning.' The Negro leaned way back in his
saddle, clapped
his hands and hollowed, 'Bless God for that!' John
Duncan jumped out
the
door and threw a rock at the Negro man. He was
chastized for this act
and
he replied, 'No Negro can shout in front of me after
my people have
suffered
so.' He had three grandsons shot down in one day at
Gettysburg."
Brickey Mill
The original
Brickey Mill
on Stony Creek, north of Ft. Blackmore, in Scott Co.,
VA, was built
about
1845 by Peter Brickey. Peter Brickey ran the mill
until his death.
After
his death the mill fell to his son James Brickey and
at his death to
his
son John Brickey. John traded the mill to George Wolfe
who died and
left
it to his daughter who was a widow Jennings. Mrs.
Jennings sold the
mill
to Will Owens who at his death left it to his
son-in-law Graham G.
Brickey.
The present mill was
rebuilt
by George Wolfe around 1907-1908. The wheels for this
mill were made by
James Stewart, who along with his father before him
were noted
millwrights
of the Rye Cove section. Much of the mill machinery is
intact and the
mill
ran until just before World War II. The old water
wheel at the back of
the building has fallen down and almost rotted away.
The mill was
operated
by an "overshot" wheel with the mill race running from
a very large
spring
further up Stony Creek.
Logan Cox Mill
This mill located
in Alley
Valley of Scott Co.,VA is a composite, being made of
parts of older
mills
and is completely functional today. Owned by Mr. Logan
Cox who set up
the
smaller wheel with intentions of generating
electricity for his home.
The present metal
water
wheel of the "overshot" type was installed in 1936 and
came from the
old
Patterson mill which stood about two miles up Plank
Creek from this
mill.
The first mill on
this
site was built by Bent Quillen and Henry Kidd,
Quillen's son-in-law
sometime
around the Civil War. Mr. Cox has converted the
original old mill house
into a home where he now lives and has the present
mill machinery in a
small building at the rear of the home.
The old mill house
foundation
is laid up of large limestone rocks. A cool mountained
stream has been
diverted under the basement floor. By lifting a flat
stone in the floor
one has access to a fine, clear flowing spring of
mountain water.
Logan Cox, Sr.,
father
of the present owner bought the old mill from Bent
Quillen.
The Riggs Mill
This mill no
longer standing
was undoubtably rebuilt several times, and has been
known by different
names, depending on ownership. That this was a very
early mill is
proven
by a Scott Co.,VA Court Order dated November 13, 1817
wherein Elijah
Carter
made a motion for alteration in road from his mill to
the mouth of his
mill branch.
Harry Carter,
1799-1872
owned the mill before the Civil War. The pictured mill
was probably
built
by James Stewart, or his son, who were noted
millwrights and neighbors
of the Carters. Harry Carter's wife, Polly McNew,
1810-1903, had twin
nephews,
Moses and Harry Riggs, who lived on with their Uncle
and Aunt after the
Riggs family moved to Kentucky. When Harry Riggs was
twelve years old,
the fingers of his right hand were torn off by the
mill, leaving only
the
thumb.
Upon Harry Carter's
death
the plantation and mill were left to the twin nephews.
Harry Riggs
operated
the mill until about 1925. One reason for closing it
was lack of
sufficient
water power. It was town down about 1930.
Patrick Porter
Mill
On March 2, 1774,
the Court
of old Fincastle Co., VA, entered the following order:
"On motion of Patrick Porter, leave is
granted
him to build a mill on Falling Creek the waters of
Clinch."
This is the first
order
ever recorded for a mill on Clinch River and it was
probably the first
mill ever built in Scott Co.
There is little
doubt
that the Porter Mill of 1774 was of log, and that
the picture is of a
rebuilt
mill on the same site and foundation.
Patrick Porter,
1737-1828,
and his wife Susanna Walker came to the Clinch from
Guilford Co., NC,
in
1772, and built a fort house on Falling Creek, as
well as the mill some
two years later.
All that remains of
the
old mill today is some limestone rock foundation, a
few runs of brick
in
the old chimney, and the mill burrs which have been
moved to the lawn
of
the Lee Blackwell home nearby.
This mill had one
distinction
and that was a chimney made of handmade brick. It
has been written that
Patrick Porter, his brother-in-law Captain John
Snoddy and others
organized
a Masonic Lodge and held their meetings on the
second floor of the
mill.
If this tradition is true it may explain why the old
mill had a chimney
and fireplaces, as no other known mills in the area
had chimneys. Also
this may have been the first Masonic Lodge organized
west of the Blue
Ridge
Mountains.
After the Porters,
William
Nash owned and operated this mill for a number of
years and it was
sometimes
called Nash's Mill. When the mill was rebuilt is
unknown, but it was
torn
down after the turn of the century. This old mill
heard the "war whoop"
of many Indians as it creaked its way through more
than a century of
services
to the pioneer settlers.
The Beverly Mill
The first mill on
this
site was a small corn grist mill near the bank of
Moccasin Creek, near
Gate City, Scott Co., VA. The present mill was built
by the Click
family,
who sold it to a Mr. McClellan. After McClellan it was
operated by
Cephas
Meade and also by his son-in-law, Bill Jennings.
William E. Taylor
came
into possession of it and had the bolting machinery
installed. After
Taylor
the mill was operated by Preacher Bill Vermillion,
Harvey Wolfe, and
finally
sold to Tom G. Templeton, who was once a Mayor of
Appalachia, VA. Emory
Bellamy operated the mill for Templeton.
The original dam of
this
mill was of logs, which was torn out by Mr. Templeton,
who put in the
present
concrete dam. L. Farmer was in charge installing the
concrete dam. He
purchased
a sand rock fence from a Mr. Thomas Henry and hired
men to beat the
rocks
into sand for mixing the concrete. Templeton traded
the mill to John
Ransom
(Rant) Beverly for a farm in Tennessee. Rant Beverly
was operating the
mill in 1917. Beverly who was born in 1854 sold the
mill to Ike
Fletcher,
who in turn sold to Harvey H. Williams around 1919 or
1920. The present
owner is L. Kelly Williams.
The machinery in the
mill
is the roller type and the mill produced corn meal and
flour, as well
as
feed for livestock. A sawmill installed in the
adjoining long shed was
also operated by water from the mill wheel. The mill
last operated in
the
1940's and the machinery is intact.
Culbertson-McConnell
Mill
This old mill
located northeast
of Snowflake on Moccasin Creek in Scott Co., VA, was
built by James
Culbertson,
Jr., probably sometime in the 1880's. The mill was
operated by turbine
wheels. The original mill had a wooden dam, replaced
by a concrete dam
because the wooden dam was always washing out and
flooding the area
downstream.
James Culbertson
born
1822, went to California in 1850 to participate in the
famous
California
gold rush, and stayed there for some thirty years,
traveling back and
forth
to see his family who never left Scott Co. His wife
was Winney Kilgore.
After the death of
Culbertson,
the mill was taken over by W. Pat McConnell who had
married James
Culbertson's
daughter, Liza. McConnell rebuilt the mill to three
stories in height
and
put in a rolling mill equipped with Nordike Rolling
Mill Machinery
manufactured
in Indianapolis, Indiana. This remodeling took place
around 1915 or
1916.
The concrete dam was completed around 1919. At the
time of remodeling
the
mill had three turbine wheels in three separate pits,
one for the grist
mill, one for the rolling mill, and the third and
largest operated a
sawmill,
said to be the heaviest mill in the county.
After the death of
Pat
McConnell in 1929, the mill was sold to a man named
Shephard who
operated
it a short time. It last operated in the 1930's.
The Semones Mill
The old Semones
Mill stood
on Benges Creek on the south side of Clinch River,
about two miles
downstream
from Dungannon, in Scott Co., VA. It was down this
Creek that the
half-breed
Indian Chief Benge led the Livingstone women, crossing
Clinch River
nearby
at McLain's Fish Trap in 1794, the last Indian raid on
the Virginia
frontier.
This mill was first
built
as a wool carding machines by James Addington. The
land was a grant to
William Addington, father of James. Moses Hoge Semones
married Eliza
Jane
Addington, daughter of James, in 1857, and after
marriage took over
operation
of the carding mill. He converted it into a grist mill
for grinding
corn
about 1910. After Moses Hoge Semones became unable to
attend the mill
it
just stood and rotted down.
Nearby where once
the
old mill stood, stands the Semones home - a two story
combination log
and
frame building. First built as a two room, two story
log building other
rooms were added as the family grew.
Mrs. Clarice Semones
Lee
of St. Paul, VA, says the house was built for her
grandfather James
Addington
who married in 1857, but a log in the older section
bears a date of
1849
carved into it.
Caleb Hawkins Mill
This old mill,
torn down
to make way for Route 58, between Dickensonville and
Hansonville
operated
for many years. The great steel wheel was sold for
scrap many years
before
the mill was torn down.
Built by Caleb
Hawkins,
the mill was once the hub of community life,
consisting of a Roller
mill,
a Tanning mill which also operated from the mill
machinery, and a
nearby
Blacksmith Shop.
This mill was also
once
a Voting Precinct of Russell County.
During the life of
the
mill the following men either owned or operated it:
Billy Gilmer, L. A.
Matheny, and George Peery.
In 1923, Roy
Kessler,
who was working at the mill was accidentally caught in
the mill
machinery
and died from his injuries.
The Jessee Mill
The Roller Process
Jessee
Mill was built between 1889 and 1900, by Andrew
Jackson Jessee. It is
located
on Mill Creek four miles southwest of Cleveland on
Route 645 and about
six miles from Lebanon, in Russell Co., VA.
The mill was built
from
lumber grown and sawed on the Jessee farm which
consisted of several
hundred
acres of land. Most of the lumber was yellow poplar
and has not
deteriorated
with age. The machinery in the mill was made in Salem,
VA. All the cogs
or gears in the machinery are wood. Prior to the
building of the
present
mill there had been a grist mill near the site of the
present one for
around
fifty years.
The building
consisted
of three floors and the machinery was installed
through the three
floors.
For several years the Jessee Mill was the only roller
mill in Russell
Co.
People came from all over the county and surrounding
counties to have
meal
and flour ground. Huge storage bins were located in
the mill for
storing
grain for the farmers.
Mill Creek during
that
time was a thriving settlement. There was a general
store, a one-room
country
school and a church.
The mill was owned
and
operated by Jack Jessee until his death in 1922. His
son, Wiley E.
Jessee
operated it for ten years. The mill closed in 1932.
Mr. Joe Axem served
as
the first miller at the Jessee Mill. Melvin Kestner
operated the mill
for
twenty-five or thirty years. He lived in the white
house just below the
Jessee home. Jamie Chafin operated the mill for
sometime, also Tilton
Jessee.
Other men who served as millers sometime during the
life of the mill
are
as follows: Vince Fields, Malcom Buchanan, Red Joe
Jessee, Clint
Fields,
Bruce Campbell and Newton Massie.
Jack Jessee built a
large
brick home in 1883 and lived there until his death,
which house is
still
standing. The home is located just below the mill. The
lumber was sawed
on the place, and the carvings on the doors and wood
work was hand
carved.
Located on the second floor hall is a red stained
glass window which
Mr.
Jessee imported from England when the house was built.
In Mr. Jessee's
later
life, he was unable to go to the mill, but he would
lie in bed and see
people coming to the mill through a large mirror near
his bedroom
window.
He always wanted everyone to come in and talk with
him.
Elk Garden Mill
This mill located
just
across the road from the Stuart Mansion at Elk Garden,
in Russell Co.,
VA, is the only brick mill known to have been built in
extreme
southwest
Virginia.
Built by Aaron
Hendricks
sometime between 1823 and 1840, the mill served the
Elk Garden
community
and later the Stuart plantation for many years,
grinding corn, wheat,
buck
wheat and feed for livestock.
Aaron Hendricks was
a
son of Thomas Hendricks who owned the land from around
1769 to 1823,
and
Thomas built the Stuart Mansion about 1806. The land
fell to Aaron
Lilburn
Hendricks who sold it in 1868 to William Alexander
Stuart, father of
Governor
Henry Carter Stuart and the Governor held the land
from around 1880 to
his death, when it passed to State Senator Harry C.
Stuart in 1933, and
is now owned by the Stuart Land and Cattle Company,
the largest cattle
ranch east of the Mississippi.
Governor Henry
Carter
Stuart was a cousin of the Civil War Confederate
General J. E. B.
Stuart.
Robinson Mill
Located about 300
yards
from U. S. 23, on Clintwood Road at Pound, Wise Co.,
VA, stood the old
Robinson Mill which was washed away in the flood of
1957.
The first mill in
this
site was built sometime after 1816 by James Mullins
and Greenberry
Robinson.
From the Russell County records we find that James
Mullins and
Greenberry
Robinson bought several thousand acres of land on
Pound, Indian Creek
and
Bold Camp creeks in 1815. Two years later Robinson
sold his interest in
the land and moved to Pike Co., KY.
It is said that
James
Mullins built his house near where the Gus Roberson
house once stood
and
that he built a mortar for pounding corn into meal
nearby. This
pounding
mill was first built for his own use, but a short time
later he
conceived
the idea of enlarging it and operating it by
horse-power, and people of
the Pound area would come for miles around to Mullins'
pound for their
meal.
Mullins continued to
operate
the pound until 1837, when he sold to William
Roberson, who moved there
from Gladeville (now Wise), and replaced the pound
with a small
watermill
which he operated by himself and his son, James, until
the year 1857,
when
James Roberson employed C. Pinkney Carter, of Scott
Co., VA, to build
the
mill which was washed away in 1957. It was probably at
the time that
Carter
rebuilt the mill that rolling machinery was added for
making flour.
William Roberson
operated
the mill until about 1869, and James Roberson from
then until about
1900;
and Augustus Roberson from then until about 1934.
Augustus was the last
to operate the mill and he was a son of James
Roberson, the former
owner.
The old mill was
four
stories high. The first floor contained the water
wheel and machinery.
The second floor the corn mill and the third the flour
mill. The wheat
was poured into hoppers on the second floor and was
carried by
conveyors
to the top floor, cleaned and then brought back to the
second floor
where
it was ground, and then again to the third floor where
it was bolted,
ending
up again on the first floor through elevators to the
waiting customer.
The old mill had a
forebay
and overshot wheel. Later Gus Roberson installed a
turbine wheel. There
was also a sawmill connected to the old mill which
operated from the
water
power of the mill.
Bickley Mills
In
Castlewood, on
lower Mill Creek there are the foundations of two old
water mills and
three
abandoned mill burrs. In these remnants of a by-gone
day one could
almost
say lies buried the history of Castlewood - the
history of the first
settlements
ever made along the Clinch River, for it was around
this spot that John
Morgan led his settlers in 1769. Little is known of
Morgan and his
settlers
who came into the beautiful Clinch River Valley, other
than that each
was
to take up 400 acres of land for settlement. We do not
know the names
of
any of the original settlers for sure, other than John
Morgan and John
Smith, not even the number in the settlement party, or
from whence they
came.
Somewhere in this
vicinity
also lived the legendary Jacob Cassell, for whom
Cassell's Woods was
named,
shrouded in the mists of the past, about whom all
sorts of legendary
tales
are told. Despite the fact that he was an ordinary
person, but who
probably
preceded even Morgan's settlement the place bears his
name after more
than
two centuries have blown over his dim footprint.
Mill Creek is a
clear,
beautiful stream emerging from under the red hills of
Russell and
cascading
over an ancient limestone cliff to form a lovely
waterfall. Just below
this fall, which furnished water for the mill race,
lie the two
foundations
and three grinding wheels, nostalgic reminders of a
restless roaming
race
of men who were not content to remain here, but who
helped to settle
the
great central part of America.
Nearest to the fall
is
the smaller and older of the two foundations. Some
fifteen feet
downstream
is the other and larger of the two foundations and
here lies the three
heavy stone grinding wheels. This latter mill, built
probably around
1783,
creaked and groaned its way through well over a
century of time, and
lasted
well into the memory of older citizens of Castlewood.
No doubt the Red
Men many times gazed upon these mills with hatred,
seeing them as the
symbols
of the ever encroaching white men upon their land.
From scanty records
it
appears that John Lynch, who was a merchant and who
did not live in the
area had the smaller mill built and it was probably
operated for him by
Frederick Fraley. Colonel Daniel Smith, who was
assistant Surveyor for
old Fincastle County, which Russell was then a part
of, wrote to his
superior
Colonel William Preston, on March 22, 1774, saying:
"Yesterday, (March
21, 1774) I surveyed John Lynch's mill seat."
At this time Smith
was
making surveys for the original settlers from 1769,
and Lynch either
had
the mill in operation at this time or soon thereafter.
We also find in
the court records of old Fincastle County in the year
1773 where John
Lynch
and his brother Christopher Lynch, business partner,
brought suit
against
Castlewood residents for debts which appear to have
been made at the
mill.
No record has been found permitting the erection of
this mill and it
may
have been erected without permit sometime between 1769
and 1774.
John Lynch assigned
his
"mill seat" property to Frederick Fraley, the latter
having apparently
settled upon the land when he arrived from Rowan Co.,
NC in 1769. It is
highly probable that Fraley had managed the mill for
Lynch before he
bought
it, and it may be that he and his neighbors built the
mill soon after
their
arrival in 1769, as bread is a necessity and a means
of obtaining it
would
have been their first consideration.
Sometime around
1780,
Frederick Fraley seems to have sold the mill to Henry
Hamlin, and moved
to the Moores Fort property in lower Castlewood which
he had bought.
Before
acquiring the mill seat Hamlin had been living on land
on the north
side
of Clinch River opposite the mill. Hamlin received his
patent for the
mill
land sold him by Fraley from the Washington County
Court on November
11,
1782, but had possession for sometime prior to
receiving the patent.
Hamlin had the
second
mill built sometime around 1782 or 1783, for it was
surely this mill
upon
which Charles Bickley, Simon Auxier and Henry
Dickenson were working
when
17 Indians attacked and scalped Ann Bush, later Ann
Niece. It was
around
this old mill which was undoubtably built of logs that
the community
grew.
The mill shown in the picture while on the same
foundation has to be of
later construction.
Again we go to
Daniel
Smith, the Surveyor and Captain of Militia for
Confirmation. In a
letter
written to Colonel William Campbell, dated May 19,
1783, he writes:
"On my return from the Cumberland, I
came
through Cassell's Woods, just after the Indians had
been at the Fort at
Hamlin's Mill."
Henry Hamlin ran the
mill
for a few years and on June 19, 1787 sold it to
James Bush with the
deed
showing, "it being part of land patented to him on
November 12, 1782,
the
same land he purchased from Frederick Fraley. As
further evidence of
Bush's
ownership is a Russell County deed of September 17,
1795 which reads:
"lying
on the waters of Moccasin Creek and Clinch River up
to Bush's Mill
Creek."
James Bush sold the
mill
tract on May 27, 1800 to Charles Bickley. It was
Charles Bickley who
put
Bickley's Mills on the map, and who still had
possession of it at his
death
in 1839.
Under Bickley's
management
Bickley's Mills became a trading center for the
western frontier. He
converted
it into a rolling mill for grinding wheat and
buckwheat. He opened up a
mercantile business which flourished. One of the old
Bickley Mills
ledgers
is now in possession of Mr. L. E. Gibson of
Castlewood, a descendant of
Bickley. Many of the items mentioned in the 1830's
sound strange today.
Charles Bickley not
only
expanded the mill, but built a sawmill further
upstream, and along with
Henry Dickenson, as a partner had installed Carding
and Fulling
Machines
for cloth work. In his will dated April 3, 1825,
Henry Dickenson leaves
to his son, Henry, Jr., "My interest in the Carding
and Fulling
machines
at Charles' Bickley's."
A Carding Machine
was
a machine for carding wool by separating fibers and
cleaning them of
extraneous
matter, making it soft and ready for the bobbin.
Before invention of
the
Carding Machine, and for a long time after, wool was
"carded" by hand
with
devices known as wool cards. The wool cards were
brush like devices
with
stiff wire bristles for combing the wool and
removing foreign matter
much
as the carding machine did, but much slower.
A Fulling Machine
was
for fulling cloth by means of pestles or stampers
which beat and
pressed
it to a close, compact state, cleaned it, and made a
finer, less coarse
cloth.
Here at Bickley's
Mills
on February 3, 1832, was established a post office,
with John Bickley,
son of Charles, as postmaster, known as Bickley's
Mills, Russell Co.,
VA.
This post office continued to serve Castlewood until
February 1, 1907.
Also here, for several years the "Bickley's Mills
Post" newspaper was
published,
copies of which can still be found as proud
possessions of Castlewood
residents.
The late Mrs. Mamie
Gose,
descendant of both Charles Bickley and Henry
Dickenson, and who
remembered
the last old mill, told me, "it stood and rotted and
finally the wind
blew
it down."
The William Gray
Mill
I would like to
have known
William Gray. He must have been a good man, deeply
religious, but
humane
enough to serve the Biblical wine to his workmen at
the end of each
long
day. This Biblical wine was made from the squeezed
comb of honey and is
known as Methlium or Mede, but by the people of the
day was called
"Methiglum".
In 1813 William Gray
married
Nancy Green Stallard and soon afterward built his log
house in a bend
of
Clinch River, a short distance downriver from
Dungannon in Scott Co.,
VA,
where his wife's two grandfathers had carved out a
home on the frontier
when it was still plagued by hostile Indians. Here
through ingenuity
and
hard work he built his plantation of several hundred
acres into a
self-sufficient
and productive farm that eventually made him one of
the wealthiest men
of his day and all without the help of human slavery.
Perhaps the first
addition
to the plantation was a mill built about 1835 to
furnish bread for
himself
and neighbors. Mr. Otto Dingus, great grandson of
Gray, tore the mill
down
in 1957, and retains a vivid memory of some of the
unique and unusual
construction
methods used in the old log mill house. The wall logs
he used to build
a house in Dungannon setting the logs in a vertical
position, instead
of
the usual horizontal method. He states that the poplar
cap log on the
west
side of the mill house was 32 feet long and so
perfectly hewn, that
when
he sawed it into lumber there was less than a quarter
inch variation in
thickness in the entire 32 feet of length. The log had
been hewn 10
inches
thick and 18 inches wide. The rafters were very
unique, being hewn 5
inches
square at the eave end, tapering to 2 inches square at
the ridge where
they crossed and were fastened together with a wooden
dowel. The eave
ends
were doweled into the cap log.
Mr. Dingus has one
of
the wooden keys that drove the pinion wheel which he
uses as a
door-stop.
The stone mill burrs are ornaments on Mr. Dingus'
front lawn.
The mill flume
started
about three hundred feet upstream from the mill where
there was a small
dam of earth and limestone rocks about three feet deep
and raced down a
steep incline to pour onto the large, overshot wheel
to turn the
machinery.
Mr. Dingus recalls
that
his grandfather Dingus and his great grandfather Billy
Gray were great
friends. Once when his grandfather Dingus was
visiting, Billy Gray
removed
a brick from the chimney inside the house and showed
him where he had
some
money hidden, there being no banks in those times.
That night Mr.
Dingus
did not sleep and come morning he went to Gray and
advised him to move
the money, fearing that if it was stolen, he knowing
its whereabouts,
that
suspicion might kill their lifelong friendship.
Near where Billy
Gray's
L-shaped log house once stood is one of the few brick
spring houses
built
on the frontier of Virginia, where the family water
supply came from
and
where the milk was kept cool on hot days. It is shaded
by a large
catalpa
tree that must be well over a century old and has been
a home for wild
bees for many years. The mill and spring house creek
have large catalpa
trees spaced from the spring house to where the creek
empties into
Clinch
River planted by loving hands in the long ago.
Sometime in the
1890's
a school was built on the Gray property and Otto
Dingus attended school
there in 1899. His father lived across Clinch River
and the children
were
rowed across the river in a flat boat to and from
school. It is not
known
when the last school was taught here, but some of the
teachers were
Cowan
Stallard, Clara Kidd, Mozell Cox, Laura Rhoten, Maggie
Wolfe and Bascom
Dingus.
Upon a limestone
point,
a short distance from the old mill site stands a
rapidly deteriorating,
but architecturally intriguing Free Will Baptist
Church built by Billy
Gray. The lumber in the building is first quality,
whipsawed yellow
poplar.
Inside the church is one of the few "Mourner's
benches" to be found any
where. On the lawn of the church stands the solitary
tomb of the
builder
with this epitaph:
In Memory of
William Gray
Born February 13th 1806
Died January 14th 1888
Age 81 years, 11 months, and 1 day
This was his last request to sleep by
the Free Will Baptist Church he built.
His grave could
not be
dug deep enough in the hard limestone rock, so it was
built partially
above
ground with limestone and mortar, with two flat
limestone slabs about
four
inches thick, fit together to form the top of the
tomb.
Around the hillside
from
the church is a low opening in the hillside that one
can only crawl
into
but which opens up inside to form a fair size cave,
and here during the
Civil War the Gray family hid their hams and bacon to
prevent them
being
taken by the contending armies and "bushwhackers".
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