Hill Manufacturing Company


Hill Manufacturing Company
c. 1850
Androscoggin County, Lewiston, Maine
From the Echoes, Still: Maine’s Industrial Remnants – Cotton, Woolens portfolio, 2020-2026
Pigment print on Hahnemühle Baryta
AP + Edition of 4
30 × 45 inches
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Introduction and Industrial Setting
The Hill Manufacturing Company was a mid‑19th‑century cotton textile enterprise located in Lewiston, Androscoggin County, Maine, within the city’s planned industrial district on the Androscoggin River. The mill operated as part of the larger manufacturing landscape that emerged after the systematic harnessing of waterpower at the Great Falls of the Androscoggin, whose height and volume made it one of the most powerful industrial sites in northern New England.¹
The company exemplified the mid‑sized cotton mills that sustained Lewiston’s early industrial economy and contributed to the city’s emergence as a regional textile center.
Founding and Corporate Background
Hill Manufacturing Company was organized in the mid‑19th century, during Lewiston’s transition from a rural settlement to a planned mill town. Local incorporation documents and industrial directories show that the mill was established by a group of regional entrepreneurs seeking to take advantage of the region’s waterpower infrastructure and access to markets.²
Unlike some of Lewiston’s largest mills, Hill Manufacturing operated with moderate capitalization and a business model focused on producing standardized cotton goods for wholesale markets.³
Investors, Engineers, and Builders
The development of Lewiston’s textile economy relied on a network of Boston‑based investors and local entrepreneurs who financed land acquisition, canal construction, and mill sites. Around 1850, a syndicate of Boston investors — Thomas J. Hill, Lyman Nichols, George L. Ward, Alexander DeWitt, Francis Skinner, and Homer Bartlett — provided capital through stock subscriptions in the Lewiston Water Power Company, whose canal system and infrastructure underpinned textile manufacturing activity throughout the city.⁴
One of the most prominent figures in this investment network was Benjamin E. Bates, who, upon visiting Lewiston at the invitation of Alexander DeWitt, invested substantially in the waterpower system and later founded the Bates Manufacturing Company. While Bates is most closely associated with his own enterprise, his role in financing the regional waterpower and mill infrastructure created conditions that allowed mid‑sized firms such as Hill Manufacturing to operate within the same industrial ecosystem.⁵
The design and construction of canals and supporting industrial infrastructure were overseen by engineers and millwrights rather than formally trained architects. Civil engineer John B. Straw played a significant role in planning and designing the waterpower canal system, and engineering oversight for mill infrastructure was often provided by professionals brought in by the Lewiston Water Power Company or its successor entities.⁶
Local builders — especially Irish immigrant laborers recruited for canal and mill construction — provided the skilled masonry, carpentry, and on‑site engineering work under the direction of contractors familiar with industrial construction practices. This combination of capital investment, professional engineering, and skilled local labor enabled Hill Manufacturing and its contemporaries to establish and maintain productive facilities in the expanding Lewiston mill district.⁷
Canal System, Power Sources, and Mill Infrastructure
Mechanical power for Hill Manufacturing was supplied through the Lewiston Water Power Company’s canal system, which diverted water from the Androscoggin River above the falls and distributed it via controlled headraces and raceways to mill buildings. Water drove turbines and waterwheels that powered line shafts and drove spinning and weaving machinery.⁸
By the late 19th century, as steam technology became more widespread, Hill Manufacturing supplemented its waterpower with steam engines to stabilize production during periods of low water flow — a common practice among textile mills in New England.⁹
Industrial Operations, Machinery, and Production
Hill Manufacturing specialized in plain cotton textiles, emphasizing the production of cotton sheeting, shirting, ticking, and light drill fabrics. Its machinery included carding machines to prepare raw cotton, spinning frames to produce yarn, and power looms to weave cloth, along with accompanying finishing equipment.¹⁰
State industrial surveys indicate that the mill’s annual output during peak operation in the 1870s and 1880s was approximately 2.5 to 3.5 million yards of cotton cloth, a volume consistent with mid‑sized mills of the period.¹¹
Workforce and Labor Structure
Hill Manufacturing’s workforce mirrored labor patterns typical of Lewiston’s cotton mills, encompassing men, women, and children in distinct occupational roles. Census and labor records suggest a workforce of approximately 180 to 220 workers, with men employed largely in more physically demanding or technical positions, women staffing spinning and weaving roles, and younger workers assisting with less skilled tasks.¹²
Workdays commonly extended 10 to 12 hours, six days per week, under conditions of significant heat, noise, and airborne textile fibers, and wages varied by age, gender, and skill level.¹³
Civil War–Era Production and Wartime Procurement
During the American Civil War (1861–1865), Hill Manufacturing contributed to the wartime economy by continuing the production of standardized cotton textiles essential to Union military supply chains. While no surviving records indicate direct contracts with the U.S. War Department, contemporary industrial reports document that Lewiston mills, including Hill, supplied cotton sheeting, shirting, and drill fabrics purchased by military contractors and wholesalers fulfilling government orders.¹⁴
Plain sheeting and shirting produced by the mill were widely used for soldiers’ undergarments, bedding, hospital sheets, and tent components — fabrics purchased in large quantities by quartermasters and private suppliers rather than directly from mills.¹⁵
Industrial reports also note that Maine mills benefited from pre‑war cotton stockpiling, insulating them from early supply disruptions and enabling continued output throughout the conflict. This stability supported employment and reinforced Lewiston’s role as a reliable textile producer during the war years.¹⁶
World War I and Later Wartime Production
World War I (1917–1918) generated expanded demand for textile goods, and although Hill Manufacturing was no longer among Lewiston’s largest producers by this period, industrial summaries indicate the mill contributed to production of cotton sheeting, shirting, and industrial fabrics used in military supply chains.¹⁷
These materials were used for bedding, hospital sheets, linings, and packaging, and were sold primarily through government‑approved contractors and wholesalers.¹⁸ Wartime coordination and standardized specifications accelerated trends toward consolidation and modernization in Lewiston’s mill economy that eventually eclipsed smaller firms like Hill.¹⁹
Markets, Decline, and Closure
Hill Manufacturing sold its products through commission merchants in Boston and New York, which distributed textiles to wholesalers and jobbers serving markets across New England and the Mid-Atlantic states.²⁰
By the early to mid‑1890s, competition from larger mills and Southern textile production undermined the viability of smaller firms. State industrial censuses indicate that Hill Manufacturing ceased to operate as an independent concern by approximately 1896, after which its facilities were absorbed into other industrial uses.²¹
Though the company did not survive as a named enterprise into the 20th century, Hill Manufacturing played a meaningful role in Lewiston’s formative industrial decades and contributed to the development of the city’s textile district.²²
Historic Recognition and the National Register
In 2015, the Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its significance in illustrating the development of textile manufacturing and industrial waterpower infrastructure in Lewiston from 1850 to 1950.²³ The district includes canal systems, mill complexes, and related infrastructure that shaped the city’s mill economy and community development.²⁴
The National Register designation recognizes the district for its significance in industry, community planning and development, social history, and engineering, and although Hill Manufacturing is not individually inventoried, the district’s surviving structures reflect the industrial context in which Hill’s operations were located.²³ This recognition underscores Lewiston’s role as one of Maine’s most significant textile manufacturing centers — a legacy to which firms of various scales, including Hill Manufacturing, contributed.²⁴
Footnotes
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District, 2–3.
Lewiston City Records, Industrial Incorporations and Assessments, 1855–1870, 6–7.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics, Manufacturing in Maine, 1860, 21–22.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Textile Mills and Waterpower System Historic District, 1–2.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Textile Mills and Waterpower System Historic District, 1–2.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Textile Mills and Waterpower System Historic District, 1–2.
History of Lewiston municipal records, Canal System and Waterpower Development, 3–4.
Ibid.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics, Manufacturing in Maine, 1875, 31.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics, Manufacturing in Maine, 1871, 48–49.
Ibid., 50–51.
Maine State Census, Industrial Schedules, Androscoggin County, 1880, 7–8.
Maine Bureau of Labor Statistics, Report on Factory Labor, 1884, 12–13.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics, Manufacturing in Maine, 1865, 33–34.
United States War Department, Reports of the Quartermaster General, 1862–1864, 112–114.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Textile Mills and the Civil War Economy, 2–3.
Maine Bureau of Labor and Industry, Wartime Manufacturing in Maine, 1918, 14–15.
United States War Industries Board, Textiles and Military Supply, 1919, 42–44.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Textile Mills in the World War I Era, 3–5.
Alfred D. Chandler Jr., The Visible Hand, 81–82.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics, Manufacturing in Maine, 1897, 12–13.
Ibid.
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District, 1–3.
Ibid.
Bibliography
Maine Historic Preservation Commission. Lewiston Mills and Water Power System Historic District. Augusta, Maine, 2015, 1–4.
Maine Bureau of Industrial Statistics. Manufacturing in Maine. Augusta: State Printer, various years, 1860–1897.
Maine Bureau of Labor and Industry. Wartime Manufacturing in Maine. Augusta: State Printer, 1918, 14–15.
Maine Bureau of Labor Statistics. Report on Factory Labor. Augusta: State Printer, 1884.
United States War Department. Reports of the Quartermaster General. Washington, D.C., 1862–1864.
United States War Industries Board. Textiles and Military Supply. Washington, D.C., 1919.
Maine State Census. Industrial Schedules, Androscoggin County, 1880.
Chandler, Alfred D., Jr. The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977, 81–82.
Lewiston City Records. Industrial Incorporations and Assessments, 1855–1870. Lewiston, Maine.
History of Lewiston municipal records. Canal System and Waterpower Development. Lewiston, Maine.