Mill pond

For other uses, see Mill Pond (disambiguation).
Hagley mill pond on Brandywine Creek in Delaware which fed the mill race in back, to supply power to the DuPont gunpowder mills, an important armaments industry in the history of the United States.

A mill pond (or millpond) is a body of water used as a reservoir for a water-powered mill.[1][2]

Description

Mill ponds were often created through the construction of a mill dam or weir (and mill stream) across a waterway.

In many places, the common proper name Mill Pond has remained even though the mill has long since gone. It may be fed by a man-made stream,[3] known by several terms including leat and 'mill stream'. The channel or stream leading from the mill pond is the mill race, which together with weirs, dams, channels and the terrain establishing the mill pond, is the power producing purpose of the civil engineering hydraulic system.

The term mill pond is often used colloquially and in literature to refer to a very flat body of water.[2] Witnesses of the loss of RMS Titanic reported that the sea was "like a mill pond".[2][4]

Panorama of Cromford mill pond. Cromford, county of Derbyshire, England.

Footnotes and references

Footnotes

  1. Random House Dictionary (1640–1650). "Mill pond at Dictionary.com". Retrieved 7 September 2013. mill·pond [mil-pond] noun
    1. a pond for supplying water to drive a mill wheel.
    Origin: 1640–50; mill1 + pond line feed character in |quote= at position 48 (help)
  2. 1 2 3 World English Dictionary. "Mill pond at Dictionary.com" (Collins English Dictionary 10th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 7 September 2013. millpond (ˈmɪlˌpɒnd)— n
    1. a pool formed by damming a stream to provide water to turn a millwheel
    2. any expanse of calm water: the sea was a millpond line feed character in |quote= at position 59 (help)
  3. World English Dictionary (1640). "Leat at Dictionary.com" (Collins English Dictionary 10th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 7 September 2013. leat (liːt) — n ( Brit )
    1. a trench or ditch that conveys water to a mill wheel
    [Old English -gelǣt (as in wætergelǣt water channel), from let 1 ] line feed character in |quote= at position 66 (help)
  4. Ruth Becker Titanic witness

References

External links

Look up millpond in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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