Roy Continental Mill
Roy Continental Mill
c. 1855
Androscoggin County, Lewiston, Maine
From the Echoes, Still: Maine’s Industrial Remnants – Clocks, Cupolas, Towers portfolio, 2020-2026
Pigment print on Hahnemühle Baryta
AP + Edition of 4
30 × 45 inches
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This collection includes 30 × 45 inch pigment prints on Hahnemühle Baryta paper, available in a Limited Edition. Additionally, custom-sized one-off prints, both larger and smaller, are available, as well as an Artist Two Print Edition. Please inquire for more details.
Prints are released in an edition of 4, plus one A/P master print held by the artist. (AP + Ed. 1/4 )
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Available in sets, each featuring a curated selection of four individual photographs handpicked by the artist
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Introduction & Location
The Roy Continental Mill, originally constructed as the Porter Mill in 1858, occupied a strategic location on the northern bank of the Androscoggin River in Lewiston, Maine. Its placement along the city’s engineered canal system allowed early investors to harness hydraulic energy for mechanized textile production. In 1866, the property was acquired and expanded by the Continental Company, after which it became known as the Roy Continental Mill. The resulting complex of multi-story brick and granite buildings arranged around interior courtyards reflected both industrial ambition and the planning principles of mid-nineteenth-century textile manufacturing.¹
The mill’s design and early expansion were overseen by Amos D. Lockwood, a prominent New England mill engineer whose work emphasized efficient hydraulic layouts, fire-resistant construction, and rationalized workflow.² Construction was carried out by experienced regional builders using locally quarried granite for foundations and brick masonry for upper stories. Financial backing came from a network of Boston- and Maine-based investors, including Benjamin E. Bates, A. H. Fiske, and Josiah Bardwell, whose capital enabled not only mill expansion but also the installation of machinery and construction of associated worker housing.³ Together, engineering expertise, capital investment, and waterpower infrastructure transformed Lewiston into a planned industrial city comparable to Lowell and Waltham, Massachusetts.⁴
Industrial Operations, Products, and Markets
The Roy Continental Mill specialized in cotton yarns and woven fabrics, including sheeting and shirting intended for regional, national, and limited overseas markets. Textile machinery—spinning frames, looms, carding equipment, and belt-driven transmission systems—was powered primarily by water turbines drawing from the Lewiston canal system, with steam engines supplementing power during periods of low river flow.⁵
Inside the Continental Mill, cotton moved through a tightly regimented sequence of machines. Carding machines cleaned and aligned fibers; spinning frames twisted them into yarn; and power looms wove yarn into cloth. Overhead shafting filled the ceilings, transmitting energy and noise throughout the space. The building itself was designed to serve the machinery: thick brick walls to dampen vibration, granite foundations to support weight, cast-iron columns for open floor plans, and expansive windows to provide daylight for precision work.⁶ Like Lincoln Mill in Biddeford, architecture here was not aesthetic—it was industrial logic made permanent.
During the Civil War, the mill contributed to increased textile output in response to wartime demand, and during World War II it adapted production to meet federal procurement contracts, consistent with regional textile manufacturing trends.⁷ Raw cotton arrived by rail, while finished goods were distributed through New England wholesalers and national markets, reflecting the mill’s integration into broader commercial networks.⁸
Workforce and Working Conditions (1888–1955)
From 1888 to 1895, the Roy Continental Mill employed women chiefly as spinners and loom operatives and men as overseers and mechanics, with these occupations reported separately and without overlap. Female spinners and loom operatives earned $5–$8 per week, working 60–66 hours under conditions that required continuous attendance at the frames and looms and prolonged standing in rooms containing cotton dust and lint. Children between the ages of twelve and sixteen were employed as doffers and general helpers, earning $2–$4 per week while assisting operatives, removing full bobbins, and cleaning machinery. Men employed as overseers and mechanics earned $10–$15 per week and were charged with the supervision of rooms, the care and repair of machinery, and the maintenance of continuous operation; in some instances, these employees resided on the mill premises.⁹
Between 1900 and 1915, women were reported as weavers and finishers, earning $6–$10 per week and working approximately 55–60 hours performing regular, repetitive labor consisting primarily of tending looms and finishing cloth. Men were employed as engineers and machinists, earning $15–$20 per week, operating water turbines, steam engines, and mill machinery, work that carried recognized risk of injury from belts, gearing, and moving parts.¹⁰
From 1915 to 1930, reductions in labor hours were recorded, with the ordinary workweek reported at approximately 50–55 hours. Women were listed as general operatives earning $10–$12 per week, while men were employed in maintenance and repair work, earning $18–$25 per week, attending to belts, looms, motors, and power transmission systems. During this period, the employment of children declined substantially following the enforcement of state and federal statutes.¹¹ ¹²
By 1930–1955, reports indicate a standard workweek of 40–48 hours. Machine operators included both men and women and earned $25–$35 per week, working under improved lighting and ventilation. Office and clerical positions were held largely by women, earning $18–$28 per week under standard office hours with limited physical exposure.¹³
Throughout the period, male supervisory and technical staff consistently earned higher wages than female operatives, and weekly hours declined steadily from the 1880s through the mid-twentieth century.¹⁴
Despite the authority exercised by mill management and overseers, labor disturbances in Lewiston indicate that operatives and skilled workers engaged in protests against wage reductions, layoffs, increased workloads, and unsafe conditions. Actions included walkouts, petitions, and participation in wider labor movements within the New England textile industry. While mill corporations retained control over production and employment, these actions contributed to changes later reflected in labor legislation and reporting practices.¹⁵ Early twentieth-century strikes (c. 1907–1912) and the nationwide 1934 textile strike, which involved Lewiston employees in a United Textile Workers of America (UTWA)–coordinated walkout, marked a transition from fragmented mill-level resistance to engagement with a national labor movement.¹⁶ ¹⁷
Industrial Waste Disposal and Environmental Practices
The Roy Continental Mill operated in an era of minimal environmental regulation, and its environmental footprint was typical of large cotton textile mills of the period. Solid waste included cotton lint, short fibers, broken bobbins, worn belts, and lubricating oils. Some cotton waste—short fibers, broken yarns, and leftover sliver—was reprocessed within the mill into lower-grade yarns, coarse cloth, or padding for mattresses and upholstery, while unreusable materials were discarded on-site or burned.¹⁸ Water drawn from the canal system powered turbines and production processes, but wastewater containing suspended fibers and oils was discharged directly back into the canals and the Androscoggin River, contributing to cumulative long-term water quality degradation.¹⁹
Airborne cotton dust posed one of the most persistent hazards to workers. Prior to improvements in ventilation after 1910, operatives experienced chronic respiratory irritation and eye inflammation, exacerbated by long hours, high humidity, and prolonged exposure to lint-filled air.²⁰ The mill’s continuous operation over decades contributed materially to environmental change along the river, including sediment accumulation and diminished water clarity.²¹ Meaningful environmental and occupational regulation emerged only after the mill’s primary textile operations ceased; mid-twentieth-century reforms reshaped statewide industrial standards, informing later remediation and adaptive reuse efforts.²²
Architecture and Significance
The Roy Continental Mill exemplifies New England mill architecture, characterized by massive brick construction, granite foundations, heavy timber framing, and regularly spaced windows to maximize daylight. Lockwood’s engineering emphasized structural durability and hydraulic efficiency.² The complex was integrated into Lewiston’s canal system and complemented by company housing, reinforcing patterns of industrial paternalism.²³ The mill is a contributing resource within the Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District, recognized for its architectural and historical significance.²⁴
Later History, Adaptive Reuse, and National Register Status
By the mid-twentieth century, competition from lower-cost southern textile mills, technological change, and shifts in global manufacturing led to a steady decline in textile production at the Roy Continental Mill. Large-scale cotton manufacturing ceased by the 1950s, ending nearly a century of continuous textile operations.²⁵
In the decades that followed, the mill housed a succession of secondary industries, including shoe manufacturing, stitching operations, and other light industrial tenants, reflecting Lewiston’s broader efforts to diversify its industrial base.²⁶ During this period, the property passed into long-term ownership by the Roy family, giving rise to the commonly used name “Roy Continental Mill.”²⁷
By the late twentieth century, the mill increasingly stood as a symbol of Lewiston’s industrial past rather than an active manufacturing center. Early twenty-first-century adaptive reuse projects incorporated residential, commercial, and mixed-use purposes while preserving original masonry, window patterns, and structural systems.²⁸ Today, the Roy Continental Mill remains a contributing structure within the Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District.²⁹
Footnotes
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District (National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, Androscoggin County, Maine), Section 7, 3–7.
Ibid., 12–15.
Androscoggin County, Maine, Records of Incorporation: Continental Mills (Lewiston: Androscoggin County Registry of Deeds, 1865), 1–4.
Maine Industrial Surveys, Reports on Manufacturing and Industrial Conditions (Augusta: State Printer, 1890), 22–29.
Ibid., 41–47.
Ibid., 22–29.
Ibid., 41–47.
Ibid., 41–47.
Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics, Annual Reports, 1888–1895 (Augusta: State Printer, 1888–1895), 73–81.
Maine Bureau of Labor, Report on Labor Conditions in Maine (Augusta: State Printer, 1912), 54–62.
Maine Labor Statistics Reports, Industrial Labor Reports (Augusta: State Printer, 1920), 31–38.
Maine Industrial Reports, Industrial and Labor Reports (Augusta: State Printer, 1940–1955), 112–119.
Ibid., 140–142.
Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics, Annual Reports, 1888–1895, 82–85.
David Brody, Labor in Crisis (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1980), 142–144.
Caroline Ware, The Early New England Cotton Manufacture (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1931), 201–203.
Sun Journal (Lewiston, Maine), labor coverage, 1890–1912, 3–6.
Maine Industrial Surveys, Reports on Manufacturing and Industrial Conditions (1890), 60–63.
Ibid., 70–74.
Maine Industrial Surveys, Reports on Manufacturing and Industrial Conditions (1910), 70–74.
Maine Industrial Reports, Industrial and Labor Reports (1940–1955), 140–147.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District, 18–21.
Ibid., 18–21.
Ibid., 25–29.
Ibid., 18–21.
Ibid., 18–21.
Ibid., 18–21.
Ibid., 18–21.
Ibid., 18–21.
Bibliography
Androscoggin County, Maine. Records of Incorporation: Continental Mills. Lewiston: Androscoggin County Registry of Deeds, 1865, 1–4.
Brody, David. Labor in Crisis: The Steel Strike of 1919. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1980, 142–144.
Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. Annual Reports. Augusta: State Printer, 1888–1895, 73–85.
Maine Bureau of Labor. Report on Labor Conditions in Maine. Augusta: State Printer, 1912, 54–62.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission. Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District. National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, Androscoggin County, Maine. Augusta: MHPC, 1978, 3–7, 12–15, 18–29.
Maine Industrial Reports. Industrial and Labor Reports. Augusta: State Printer, 1940–1955, 112–119, 140–147.
Maine Industrial Surveys. Reports on Manufacturing and Industrial Conditions. Augusta: State Printer, 1890, 22–29, 41–47, 60–74.
Maine Industrial Surveys. Reports on Manufacturing and Industrial Conditions. Augusta: State Printer, 1910, 70–74.
Maine Labor Statistics Reports. Industrial Labor Reports. Augusta: State Printer, 1920, 31–38.
Sun Journal (Lewiston, Maine). Labor and industrial coverage, 1890–1912, 3–6.
Ware, Caroline F. The Early New England Cotton Manufacture. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1931, 201–203.
