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This complex consists of the mill, a miller's house, a summer kitchen, and a frame barn. The original section of the mill was built in 1737. The machinery was installed in 1906. It is a three-story, L-shaped, stone building with a gable roof and cupola. The house was built in 1855, and is a two-story, gable-roofed, brick banked building.
The contributing structure consists of the mill pond, dam, head race, and tail race. The Jervis Gordon Grist Mill consists of the original two-story structure that was built in 1882, with a shed addition that was erected in 1904, a rear enclosure covering the water wheel, and a machine shop addition that dates roughly to 1908. The mill includes ...
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Kulpsville has a total area of 3.4 square miles (8.8 km 2), all land. It is located on the Towamencin Creek, a tributary of the Skippack Creek . PA Route 63 runs through Kulpsville, where the Lansdale interchange of the Northeast Extension of the Pennsylvania Turnpike ( Interstate 476 ) with PA 63 is located.
This complex consists of a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stone banked mill with tin roof (1854), a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, stone Georgian-style manor house (1767), a large stone and frame barn with banked earth ramp (c. 1850), a one-story smokehouse with slate roof (c. 1767), a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story stone summer kitchen (c. 1767), a clapboarded, frame privy (c. 1939), a storage shed (c. 1939), and the millraces ...
Kuster Mill, also known as Custer's Fulling Mill and Skippack Creek Farm, is an historic, American fulling mill that is located in Evansburg State Park on Skippack Creek at Collegeville, Skippack Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. [1]
Coffeetown Grist Mill is a historic grist mill located at Williams Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1762, and is a banked building measuring 2 + 1 ⁄ 2 stories high on the banked side. The building measures 36 feet by 50 feet, and assumed its present size with additions made in the 19th century.
The mill lasted seven generations until it was dismantled in 1918 [4] after being sold to Clarence Stouffer. Over its lifetime the mill was the childhood home of two United States Senators, William Maclay (politician) [ 5 ] and Samuel Maclay , [ 6 ] this also being the birthplace of the latter of the two.
The primary buildings at this site were constructed by the Hess family in the 18th century, including a 1740s log farmhouse, a 1778 stone farmhouse, and a 1769 oil mill. Both houses served as church meeting houses for the local Mennonite community until 1856, when the first Hess Mennonite church building was constructed nearby. [ 2 ]