Showing 5 items
matching water wheel flour mill
-
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Photograph - HARRY BIGGS COLLECTION: WATER WHEEL FLOUR MILLS BRIDGWATER
... water wheel flour mill... at the Water Wheel Flour Mill Bridgewater... BUILDINGS Commercial water wheel flour mill Water Wheel Flour Mills ...Two photographs (proofs 63A and 63 B&C),. 63A,. A factory on fire, the building is almost hidden from view by the smoke.,63B&C,. Two different views of the factory buildings at the Water Wheel Flour Mill Bridgewaterbuildings, commercial, water wheel flour mill, water wheel flour mills bridgewater, factory fire -
Hume City Civic Collection
Photograph
... MILL (WATER WHEEL DRIVEN) / BEN EADIE, SUNBURY / THE FLOUR MILL..., Esq, JP, FOUNDER OF THE PIONEER FLOUR MILL (WATER WHEEL DRIVEN ...A sepia mounted photographOn back: John Eadie, Esq, JP, FOUNDER OF THE PIONEER FLOUR MILL (WATER WHEEL DRIVEN) / BEN EADIE, SUNBURY / THE FLOUR MILL WAS BUILT ON JACKSON'S CREEK IN 1861, HE ALSO HAD AN ORCHARD AND VINEYARD AND THE WINE CELLAR STILL STANDS 1966eadie, john, pioneer flour mill, water wheels, ben, sunbury, jackson's creek, vineyards, orchards, george evans collection -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Print, Dight's Mill, Yarra Yarra
"In 1839 John Dight purchased Melbourne block 88, which included 26 acres of land along the Yarra River for £481 at the Port Phillip land sales held in Sydney. Dight was already in the business of flour milling and had a mill near Campbell Town in New South Wales called ‘Ceres’. In April 1840, he notified his customers through The Sydney Herald that he was leaving to go to Port Phillip. The first steam powered flour mill was constructed in Melbourne in 1841. Dight built his water powered mill, soon after, from bricks bought over from Tasmania. Dight used the river to power his mill: Water flowed along an inlet channel to turn an undershot water wheel. In order to regulate flow or to ensure flow for times when river levels were low, Dight constructed a rough stone weir. " (https://www.melbournewater.com.au/whatwedo/projectsaroundmelbourne/Documents/A_Short_History_of_Dights_Falls_Fact_Sheet.pdf) This work forms part of the collection assembled by the historian Dorothy Rogers, that was donated to the Kew Historical Society by her son John Rogers in 2015. The manuscripts, photographs, maps, and documents were sourced by her from both family and local collections or produced as references for her print publications. Many were directly used by Rogers in writing ‘Lovely Old Homes of Kew’ (1961) and 'A History of Kew' (1973), or the numerous articles on local history that she produced for suburban newspapers. Most of the photographs in the collection include detailed annotations in her hand. The Rogers Collection provides a comprehensive insight into the working habits of a historian in the 1960s and 1970s. Together it forms the largest privately-donated collection within the archives of the Kew Historical Society.An engraving of Dight's Mill on the Yarra. The image was originally published in Sands & Kenny, Melbourne & Sydney. Dorothy Rogers reproduced the print in 'A History of Kew' (1973). It faces page 8.Published by Sands & Kenny, Melbourne & Sydney, 1856dight's mill, dorothy rogers, dight's falls, yarra river, kew, john dight -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Print, Sands & Kenny, Dights Mill, 1856
"In 1839 John Dight purchased Melbourne block 88, which included 26 acres of land along the Yarra River for £481 at the Port Phillip land sales held in Sydney. Dight was already in the business of flour milling and had a mill near Campbell Town in New South Wales called ‘Ceres’. In April 1840, he notified his customers through The Sydney Herald that he was leaving to go to Port Phillip. The first steam powered flour mill was constructed in Melbourne in 1841. Dight built his water powered mill, soon after, from bricks bought over from Tasmania. Dight used the river to power his mill: Water flowed along an inlet channel to turn an undershot water wheel. In order to regulate flow or to ensure flow for times when river levels were low, Dight constructed a rough stone weir." (Melbourne Water)Dights Mill. Reproduction of a book plate from an original wood engraving, showing Dights Mill and Falls on the River Yarra. The image was originally published in Sands & Kenny, Melbourne & Sydney.Annotation on reverse: "Dights Flour".dights mill, yarra river -
Sunbury Family History and Heritage Society Inc.
Photograph
The former mill and weir shown in the photograph were sited on the banks of Jacksons Creek downstream from the town of Sunbury. John Eadie, a Scottish immigrant established the water-driven flour mill on the banks of the creek after he arrived in the colony in 1866. The mill continued operating until the outbreak of World War 1 when the metal wheel and iron roofing were taken and used for the war effort. The hill in the back ground with the trees and buildings was the site of the former Sunbury Asylum. Milling was one of Sunbury's early industries that were established in the district.A black and white photograph of a building and a lake in a valley. Buildings and trees are visible on a distant hillside.sunbury flour mill., milling