Worumbo Mills

Worumbo Mills

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c. 1864
Androscoggin County, Lisbon Falls, 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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  • 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.

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  • Worumbo Mils was established in 1864 in Lisbon Falls, Maine, at the site of Worumbo Falls on the Androscoggin River—one of the most powerful and economically valuable waterpower sites in the state.¹ The falls had supported earlier sawmills and small manufactories, but the construction of Worumbo Mills marked the transition to large-scale textile manufacturing and the emergence of Lisbon Falls as a major industrial center during the Civil War era.²

    The original mill complex consisted of large brick structures with heavy timber framing, designed to harness waterpower through canals, flumes, and turbine systems.³ By the late nineteenth century, the complex had expanded to include multiple mill buildings, picker houses, dye rooms, warehouses, and boiler facilities. Steam engines were installed to supplement waterpower, ensuring uninterrupted production during periods of low river flow and allowing the mill to operate longer hours.⁴

    Worumbo Mills specialized in cotton textiles, producing sheetings, shirtings, denims, twills, and heavier industrial fabrics used for work clothing and household goods.⁵ By the 1880s, the mill operated approximately 40,000–45,000 spindles and more than 1,000 power looms, placing it among the largest textile producers in Maine.⁶ Raw cotton was processed on-site from carding and spinning through weaving and finishing, allowing for efficient, vertically integrated production.⁷

    At its peak in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Worumbo Mills employed between 700 and 900 workers.⁸ The workforce included native-born Mainers as well as large numbers of immigrant laborers, particularly French Canadians who migrated from rural Quebec in search of steady industrial employment.⁹ Irish immigrants and their descendants were also well represented in the early workforce. Men typically held skilled positions as machinists, engineers, loom fixers, and overseers, while women worked primarily as spinners, weavers, and cloth inspectors.¹⁰

    Work at the mill was physically demanding and tightly regimented. Employees generally worked ten to twelve hours per day, six days a week, with shifts beginning around 6:00 a.m.¹¹ Wages varied by gender and skill: skilled male workers earned approximately $10–14 per week by the 1890s, while women earned $5–8 per week, and children—employed in earlier decades as doffers and cleaners—earned even less.¹² The mill environment was noisy and hazardous, characterized by airborne cotton dust, unguarded belts, and rapidly moving machinery. Child labor declined in the early twentieth century following state and federal labor reforms.¹³

    By the early twentieth century, Worumbo Mills was one of the most technologically advanced textile operations in the region, incorporating modern looms, improved turbine systems, and electric lighting.¹⁴ Despite these advancements, the mill faced growing competition from southern textile manufacturers with lower labor costs and newer facilities. Production declined gradually, and textile operations ceased in the mid-twentieth century, ending nearly a century of continuous manufacturing.¹⁵

    Today, the surviving Worumbo Mill buildings remain dominant features of the Lisbon Falls landscape. The complex stands as a tangible reminder of Maine’s industrial heritage and the central role of textile manufacturing in shaping the town’s economic, social, and cultural development. Worumbo Mills exemplifies the broader history of water-powered industry, immigrant labor, and industrial decline in New England, making it a significant candidate for historic preservation and interpretation.¹⁶

    Footnotes

    1. Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Textile Mills of the Androscoggin River Valley (Augusta: MHPC, 1996), 44–46.

    2. Earle G. Shettleworth Jr., “Industrial Development of Lisbon Falls,” Maine History 29, no. 2 (1990): 88.

    3. Ibid., 90.

    4. Robert M. Frame Jr., Maine Industrial Buildings (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1979), 132.

    5. Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics, Annual Report (Augusta, 1892), 211.

    6. Ibid., 213.

    7. Frame, Maine Industrial Buildings, 134.

    8. United States Census Bureau, Manufactures of the United States: 1900 (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1902), 678.

    9. Ronald D. Cohen, Workers and Reform in Maine, 1870–1920 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1981), 52–54.

    10. Shettleworth, “Industrial Development of Lisbon Falls,” 94.

    11. Maine Bureau of Labor Statistics, Conditions in Textile Mills (Augusta, 1905), 17.

    12. Cohen, Workers and Reform in Maine, 61.

    13. United States Department of Labor, Child Labor in Textile Manufacturing (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1911), 9.

    14. Frame, Maine Industrial Buildings, 138.

    15. Maine Department of Economic Development, Historic Industry Survey: Androscoggin County (Augusta, 1958), 22.

    16. Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Textile Mills of the Androscoggin River Valley, 49.

    Bibliography

    Cohen, Ronald D. Workers and Reform in Maine, 1870–1920. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1981.

    Frame, Robert M., Jr. Maine Industrial Buildings. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1979.

    Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. Annual Report. Augusta: State of Maine, 1892.

    Maine Bureau of Labor Statistics. Conditions in Textile Mills. Augusta: State of Maine, 1905.

    Maine Department of Economic Development. Historic Industry Survey: Androscoggin County. Augusta, 1958.

    Maine Historic Preservation Commission. Textile Mills of the Androscoggin River Valley. Augusta, 1996.

    Shettleworth, Earle G., Jr. “Industrial Development of Lisbon Falls.” Maine History 29, no. 2 (1990): 85–101.

    United States Census Bureau. Manufactures of the United States: 1900. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1902.

    United States Department of Labor. Child Labor in Textile Manufacturing. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1911.