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Windmills and Water Mills of Long Island. Charleston, SC: Arcadia. ISBN 0-7385-0288-X. Lombardo, Donald (2003). Windmills of New England, Their Genius, Madness, History & Future. Cape Cod, MA: On Cape Publications. ISBN 0-9719547-7-1. Unless stated otherwise, the source for all entries is the Windmill World website.
It had regular bi-monthly columns including news on upcoming auctions and sales. The magazine was part of Antiques Information Services Ltd. [1] It was based in Kent. [1] It was relaunched in 2015 as a free online magazine, with the new owner having absolutely no involvement in the previous Antiques Info magazine.
It includes any type of magazine and single special editions. Groupings are based on over 3 million newsstands copies and distribution. Considered "The Greatest Magazine Ever Published" by David Plotz , Life magazine figures sold the most amount for decades, with a weekly circulation of 4 million copies and over 10 million readers in their ...
The brand of windmills that the Kregel Windmill Company produced was called "ELI" — as an homage to one of George Kregel's friends, a deceased preacher named Eli Huber. Kregel windmills were used to pump water from wells at farms and homes in the region of southeastern Nebraska surrounding Nebraska City.
The magazine began as a column in Publishers Weekly called "Antiquarian Bookseller"; in 1948, it spun off as a separate publication, at a time when there was a flourishing mail-order business in out-of-print and second-hand books. [4] Malkin purchased the magazine from Bowker in 1953. It first appeared under its final title in 1967. [5]
The sails were removed in 1864 and the windmill was relegated to use as a store. [4] In 1902, the lease on the watermill expired and a steam engine was installed in the windmill. [5] This was later replaced by a gas engine. The windmill was worked by engine until 1934, and supplied wholemeal flour to West End hotels and restaurants.
The "Iron Turbine" windmill is the sole known intact example of the first mass produced all-metal windmill remaining in the Southwest and probably the United States. Produced by Mast, Foos and Company of Springfield, Ohio, from 1876 to ca. 1898, the mill is highly significant as it relates to the technical evolution of turbine wheeltype water ...