Journey Indiana
Milling About: This Grain Mill Was Cutting Edge in the 1890s
Clip: Season 7 Episode 5 | 6m 5sVideo has Closed Captions
Well over a century after it was constructed the Mansfield Roller Mill is still functional.
It may not look like it, but when the Mansfield Roller Mill was built in the 1880's it was cutting edge technology. Much of that original equipment remains, including an 85 horsepower underwater turbine. And well over a century after it was constructed the mill is still functional.
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Journey Indiana is a local public television program presented by WTIU PBS
Journey Indiana
Milling About: This Grain Mill Was Cutting Edge in the 1890s
Clip: Season 7 Episode 5 | 6m 5sVideo has Closed Captions
It may not look like it, but when the Mansfield Roller Mill was built in the 1880's it was cutting edge technology. Much of that original equipment remains, including an 85 horsepower underwater turbine. And well over a century after it was constructed the mill is still functional.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪ >> Perched on the edge of Raccoon Creek, in central west Parke County sits the historic Mansfield Roller Mill.
♪ It may not look like much now, but at the turn of the 20th century, this was a state-of-the-art facility, and a linchpin of the local economy.
Today, it's maintained by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources as a prime example of Indiana's early industrial economy.
>> This really gives us a beautiful snapshot of what milling was like at the end of the 1800s.
Critical point in American history was sort of the final full-on into industrialization that the country kind of went, and this really shows on a local level what that industrialization was really like.
I think most people think of big steel mills, giant factories and big cities, and Indiana was industrialized very much on a small town basis first.
>> Jacob Rohm, a successful local miller, purchased this parcel of land in 1875.
He quickly tore down an older, less efficient mill built in 1819.
>> The first mill that was here in 1819, it utilized a tub wheel.
So that's a sideways waterwheel, and immediately on top of that was the stones.
It was a very labor intensive job.
You had to shovel and carry everything on a bag over your shoulder.
A day's worth of grinding here would have probably been several weeks worth of grinding in that old mill.
Rohm sought success through efficiency as he built his new mill on the banks of Raccoon Creek.
>> Jacob Rohm, who owned several other steam-powered mills, saw this as an opportunity to basically get a free power source for his mill, which meant that he could take risks that he couldn't at his steam-powered mills.
There was a significant amount of new technologies and ideas that had flooded into the milling industry and market.
And Jacob Rohm saw those, and he wanted this to be a proving ground at least for himself.
♪ >> Rohm's first big change was to replace age-old stone grinders with precision steel rollers.
>> We call it one of the first in Indiana.
It was the first in this region, the Wabash Valley, to get rollers, which is the technology that's still being used today.
So two big rollers that go like this, grain goes down, gets crushed, falls between them.
With the rollers, you can actually very finely control how the fineness and, like, how fast it's going.
With stones, you can't really push the stones much closer together than they are already set.
If you do, it might start a fire or it will get a real nasty taste, or it's just going to be grinding it too close.
With the metal rollers, you could actually run the grain through the same machine again and again to get a very even, fine and high-quality product.
>> Rohm's mill needed more power than a traditional waterwheel could offer, and so he installed an underwater turbine in 1886, which is still in place.
And 138 years later, still functional.
Turbines were used in a lot of mills in the latter half of the 1800s when they started becoming very viable.
So they started to replace waterwheels and the vertical turbines that you find at, say, a place like Spring Mill State Park at their mill.
All right.
So out here is the mill pond that directs the water off the creek.
By using this gate here, we can get the water down into the turbines and get the mill turned on.
So the water, we control it with a series of gates.
And historically, you would have had about 7 feet of water sitting on top of that turbine.
That water then goes through holes in the side of the casing, and more or less, pushes water pressure on to a spinning fan blade, and that's what creates the circular motion.
So this particular mill is all belt run.
We've got one shaft that comes out of the turbine.
From there, we hook up all the belts and the belts spin each of the machines.
It was running the four wheat rollers, 16 elevator banks, as well as probably about 15 to 20 other pieces of machinery just dedicated to processing wheat.
♪ >> But it wasn't just modern equipment that made this mill superior.
The design of the building played a large part too.
>> So the verticality of the mill, it kind of gives the ability of the mill to go up.
So when someone comes in and dumps the grain, they're actually going to dump it in a drop chute that goes down to the basement.
The elevators then will move it all the way up to the top of the building and gravity can then work its way from there.
And then you can arrange the flow of the mill so that as it goes through, it hits the most amount of machines that it needs in a single run; whereas, otherwise, you would have to move everything on a, like, horizontal plain, which would actually be much harder at the time.
>> The mill changed hands several times over the years, but it had a surprisingly long life, only ceasing operations in 1967.
In 1995, it was gifted to the Indiana DNR for historic preservation.
And today, it's open for tours, allowing the public to get a glimpse of what Indiana was like at a pivotal period in time.
>> Most people don't really think about where their food comes from and what went into making it that way.
And so here at the mill, we very much are able to show you the process has been there for a while.
And they get to kind of see how people pieced that together and came up with all of that.
The Country Contributor: How Juliet Strauss Worked to Save Turkey Run State Park
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S7 Ep5 | 6m 6s | Juliet Strauss was a leader in saving the lands that would become Turkey Run State Park. (6m 6s)
Covered Bridges to the Past: Parke County Turns Out For Their Annual Festival
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S7 Ep5 | 4m 55s | Folks in Parke County love their covered bridges. (4m 55s)
A Racetrack in the Woods: Why Jungle Park Speedway Was Such a Dangerous Racetrack
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S7 Ep5 | 5m 20s | Jungle Park Speedway was one of the most dangerous places to race a car. (5m 20s)
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Journey Indiana is a local public television program presented by WTIU PBS