Mill No.18

Mill No.18

$0.00

c. 1851
North Vassalboro Woolen Manufacturing Company, Kennebec County, Outlet Stream, North Vassalboro, 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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  • The North Vassalboro Woolen Manufacturing Company in North Vassalboro, Maine, is a historically significant textile facility that dates back to 1850. Textile manufacture in the village had early roots in wool carding and cloth dressing, but it was the entrepreneurial initiative of John D. Lang, a Quaker businessman and abolitionist, Alton Pope, and Peter M. Stackpole that catalyzed local industrial growth. By 1836, Lang — who brought capital and operational experience from Providence, Rhode Island — had joined his brothers‑in‑law Pope and Stackpole to invest in wool carding and dressing facilities along Outlet Stream.¹

    Building on this foundation, Lang purchased the adjacent tannery property around 1850, and in 1851 the first substantial brick woolen mill was constructed, replacing the earlier wool operation.² A brick kiln was built on site, the bricks fired, and the mill walls erected — a testament to the hands-on industrial capacity of the enterprise. By 1861, the mill had been expanded to 47 by 200 feet, making it the largest woolen mill in New England at the time.³ At its peak in the late 19th century, the mill employed nearly 600 people, many of whom were immigrants from Ireland, England, and French-speaking Canada. The mill produced fine woolen cloth, including cashmere and kersey, and in 1899 became part of the American Woolen Company, one of the largest textile trusts in the United States during the Industrial Revolution.⁴

    North Vassalboro Woolen Manufacturing Company and Vassalboro Manufacturing Company

    The mill was first formalized as the North Vassalboro Woolen Manufacturing Company in the mid-1850s, with John D. Lang as president and his son Thomas Lang as mill agent.⁵ This corporate organization allowed the consolidation of smaller workshops, formal management of production, and oversight of the growing workforce.

    Later, the company became known as the Vassalboro Manufacturing Company, reflecting reorganization and expansion of operations in the late 1850s to 1860s.⁶ Under these structures, the mill continued to grow and innovate, hiring skilled and unskilled labor to meet increasing demand.

    The company recruited workers from England, Ireland, and French-speaking Canada, reshaping the village’s demographics and establishing North Vassalboro as a thriving mill town.⁷ Workers labored 10–12 hours per day, six days a week, in noisy, dusty environments typical of woolen textile production. Children and teenagers often worked in spooling, carding, and weaving rooms, while adults managed heavier machinery. Wages were modest, and workers commonly received pay in cash on payday, lining up at the administration office. Departments included picking, carding, spinning, weaving, dyeing, finishing, and shipping, each overseen by supervisors to maintain production and safety standards.⁸

    Industrial Operations and Machinery

    The mill quickly established its reputation for high-quality textiles. In 1851, samples of cassimere fabric produced at the mill won a gold medal at the London World’s Fair, confirming the competitive quality of its woolen products in the global market.⁹

    The mill produced a variety of woolen fabrics for both civilian and military markets. During World War I and World War II, it manufactured durable navy-blue fabric for U.S. military uniforms.¹⁰ Operations relied on waterpower from nearby streams and steam engines, which together powered the mill’s extensive machinery. The facility used carding machines, which cleaned and aligned raw wool fibers; spinning frames, which twisted fibers into yarn; power looms, which wove the yarn into finished cloth; dyeing vats, used for coloring fabric; and finishing machines, including fulling mills and presses, which refined texture and durability.¹¹

    The mill supported a thriving mill village, including worker housing, a store, a post office, and the nearby Mill Agent’s House, a Greek Revival home built in 1851 that still stands and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.¹²

    Sale to the American Woolen Company

    By the late 1890s, economic conditions and industry pressures encouraged consolidation among textile manufacturers. Small and medium-sized firms like the Vassalboro Manufacturing Company faced competition from larger producers and periodic financial strain.¹³ In 1899, the company was sold to the American Woolen Company (AWC), a corporate trust formed that same year through the consolidation of multiple New England mills.¹⁴ The sale reflected broader industry trends: larger firms could stabilize prices, rationalize production, and manage technological modernization. While the acquisition brought capital infusion and integration into a broader operational network, local control and ownership diminished.

    Later History and Adaptive Reuse

    Textile production ceased in 1955, displacing approximately 400 employees. Afterward, the mill passed through multiple owners, housing paper production, mechanical repair shops, and food packing operations. The solid brick structure survived decades of use but suffered significant damage in the 2017 windstorm, which severely affected the roof.¹⁵

    In 2010, local resident Salem Breton purchased the mill complex for under $35,000 and invested more than $100,000 in its restoration. The building, now called The Olde Mill Place, serves as a community center, hosting craft fairs, haunted house events, antique markets, weddings, mountain bike races, and the annual Parafest Maine, a paranormal convention attracting ghost hunters and supernatural enthusiasts.¹⁵ The Save the Mill campaign continues fundraising for ongoing repairs and preservation, ensuring that this monument to Maine’s industrial heritage remains a living part of the Vassalboro community.

    Footnotes

    1. Town Line (Maine), “Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Dams and Mills,” accessed 2024.

    2. Town Line (Maine), “Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Natural Resources,” accessed 2024, 3–4.

    3. Ibid., 5.

    4. Alfred D. Chandler Jr., The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977), 241.

    5. Town Line (Maine), “Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Dams and Mills,” 5–6.

    6. Ibid.

    7. Ibid., 6.

    8. Town Line (Maine), “There Is Still Plenty of Life — and Afterlife — in the North Vassalboro Olde Mill,” accessed 2024.

    9. Janice Clowes, Vassalboro (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007), 32; Town Line (Maine), “Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Dams and Mills,” accessed 2024.

    10. Town of Vassalboro, Annual Report (Vassalboro, ME, 2012), 130–132.

    11. Ibid.

    12. Ibid.

    13. Chandler, The Visible Hand, 239–241.

    14. Ibid., 241.

    15. Town Line (Maine), “There Is Still Plenty of Life — and Afterlife — in the North Vassalboro Olde Mill,” accessed 2024.

    Bibliography

    Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977, 235–260.

    Clowes, John, et al. Vassalboro (Images of America). Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2007, 30–38.

    Goebel-Bain, Michael. National Register of Historic Places Nomination: Vassalboro Mill Historic District. Augusta: Maine Historic Preservation Commission, 2020, 1–35.

    Town Line (Maine). “Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Dams and Mills.” Accessed 2024.

    Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Natural Resources.” Accessed 2024.

    There Is Still Plenty of Life — and Afterlife — in the North Vassalboro Olde Mill.” Accessed 2024.

    Town of Vassalboro. Annual Report. Vassalboro, ME, 2012, 110–135.