Mill City Museum
Established | 2003 |
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Location |
704 South 2nd Street Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA |
Coordinates | 44°58′46″N 93°15′26″W / 44.97938°N 93.25711°W |
Type | History Museum |
Director | Laura Salveson |
Public transit access | Bus Routes 3, 7 and 22, METRO Blue Line, METRO Green Line |
Website | |
Washburn A Mill Complex | |
The Washburn A Mill Complex from the Stone Arch Bridge | |
Location |
1st St. S. at Portland Ave. Minneapolis |
Built | 1879 |
Part of | Saint Anthony Falls Historic District (#71000438) |
NRHP Reference # | 83004388 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | May 4, 1983[1] |
Designated NHL | May 4, 1983[2] |
Mill City Museum is a Minnesota Historical Society museum in Minneapolis. It opened in 2003, built in the ruins of the Washburn "A" Mill next to Mill Ruins Park on the banks of the Mississippi River. The museum focuses on the founding and growth of Minneapolis, especially flour milling and the other industries that used water power from Saint Anthony Falls.
The mill complex, dating from the 1870s, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is part of the St. Anthony Falls Historic District and within the National Park Service's Mississippi National River and Recreation Area.
Exhibits
The museum features exhibits about the history of Minneapolis, flour milling machinery, a water lab and a baking lab. The centerpiece of the exhibit is the multistory Flour Tower, where visitors sit in the cab of a freight elevator and are taken to different floors of the building, each designed to look like a floor in a working flour mill. Voices of people who worked in the Washburn A Mill are heard throughout the show. Visitors exit on the 8th floor, where extant equipment is interpreted by staff, and are then led to the ninth-floor observation deck to view St. Anthony Falls.
The Gold Medal Flour sign still shines at night atop the adjoining grain elevator. Across the river, the former competitor Pillsbury A Mill is topped with a sign reading "Pillsbury's Best Flour."
Local artists
The work of local artists is featured throughout the building. Pieces by JoAnn Verburg, Tom Maakestad, Kim Lawler, Kathleen Richert, Paul Wrench and Becky Schurmann include murals, an art glass collage, a 15-foot (4.6 m) Bisquick box, and sculpture.
Mill City Live
Mill City Museum began an outdoor concert series named "Mill City Live" in the summer of 2004. The concerts are held in the museum's Ruin courtyard and feature Twin Cities bands of various genres. "Mill City Live" was originally held on the first and third Thursdays of June, July, August, and September, but in 2009 and 2010 concerts were held every Thursday in July and August.
List of Bands/Performers | ||||||||
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Year | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer | Band/Performer |
2004 | Tim Mahoney | Adam Levy | Ellis | Big Ditch Road | Kraig Johnson; Member of Run Westy Run, Iffy, The Jayhawks, and Golden Smog | Mark Mallman | Jessy Greene | The Owls |
2005 | Adam Levy | Nachito Herrera | The Hopefuls | Willie Walker and the Butanes | Faux Jean | Dana Thompson | Mark Olson; Founding Member of The Jayhawks | Spaghetti Western String Co |
2006 | The Hopefuls | Charlie Parr | New Primitives | Chris Koza | Yawo | Desdamona | Becky Schlegel | The Ashtray Hearts |
2007 | The Brass Kings | The New Congress | Molly Maher and Her Disbelievers | White Light Riot | JoAnna James | Salsa Del Soul | The Alarmists | Kip Blackshire |
2008 | The Owls | Romantica | M.anifest | Roma di Luna | Salsabrosa | Jelloslave | Kid Dakota | Little Man |
2009 | Jeremy Messersmith | Gospel Gossip | Caroline Smith and the Good Night Sleeps | Charanga Tropical | First Communion Afterparty | The Butanes | ||
2010 | Koerner & Glover | Aby Wolf | Joey Ryan & the Inks | Salsa Del Soul | The 757s | Idle Hands | Black Blondie |
Washburn A Mill
The first Washburn A Mill, built by Cadwallader C. Washburn in 1874, was declared the largest flour mill in the world upon its completion, and contributed to the development of Minneapolis. On May 2, 1878, a spark ignited airborne flour dust within the mill, creating an explosion that demolished the Washburn A and killed 18 workers instantly. The ensuing fire resulted in the deaths of four more people, destroyed five other mills, and reduced Minneapolis’s milling capacity by one third. Known as the Great Mill Disaster, the explosion made national news and served as a focal point that led to reforms in the milling industry. In order to prevent the buildup of combustible flour dust, ventilation systems and other precautionary devices were installed in mills throughout the country.
By 1880 a new Washburn A Mill, designed by Austrian engineer William de la Barre, opened as the largest flour mill in the world, a designation it retained until the Pillsbury A Mill opened across the river in 1881. At the peak of the Washburn A Mill's production, it could grind over 100 boxcars of wheat into almost 2,000,000 pounds of flour per day. An ad from the 1870s advertised, "Forty-one Runs of Stone. Capacity, 1,200 Barrels per Day. This is the largest and most complete Mill in the United States, and has not its equal in quantity and quality of machinery for making high and uniform grades of Family Flour in this country." Advertising hyperbole aside, the mill, along with the Pillsbury A Mill and other flour mills powered by St. Anthony Falls, contributed greatly to Minneapolis's development. The mill was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1983 for its technological innovations and its importance in the history of General Mills.[3]
Washburn later teamed up with John Crosby to form the Washburn-Crosby Company, which later became General Mills.[4]
After World War I, flour production in Minneapolis began to decline as flour milling technology no longer depended on water power. Other cities, such as Buffalo, New York, became more prominent in the milling industry. Later on in the mill's lifetime, General Mills started putting more emphasis on producing cereals and baking mixes and shifted away from flour milling. The mill was shut down in 1965, along with eight other of the oldest mills operated by General Mills, and left in disuse.
In 1991 a fire nearly destroyed the old mill, but during the late 1990s, the city of Minneapolis, through the Minneapolis Community Development Agency, worked to stabilize the mill ruins. After the city had cleaned up the rubble and fortified the mill's charred walls, the Minnesota Historical Society announced plans to construct a milling museum and education center within the ruins. Construction on the museum began in March 2001. Designed by Tom Meyer, principal for the architectural firm Meyer, Scherer & Rockcastle, the museum is a new building built with the ruin walls of the 1880 Washburn A Mill. Efforts were made to retain as much of the historic fabric of the building as was possible. Many features of the Washburn A Mill were left intact, including turbine pits, railroad tracks, a train shed and two engine houses.
Gallery
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1878 Stereograph rendering of the Great Mill Disaster
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An 1879 boxcar shows how railroads transported wheat to the mills, and flour to market
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A millstone used in previous flour milling processes
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Equipment used in the roller milling process
References
- ↑ Staff (2006-03-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ ResourceType=Building "Washburn A Mill Complex" Check
|url=
value (help). National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved 2007-11-06. - ↑ George R. Adams and James B. Gardner (September 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Washburn A Mill Complex" (pdf). National Park Service. and Accompanying 7 images, including photos from 1978. PDF (692 KiB)
- ↑ "Falls of St. Anthony". A History of Minneapolis. Minnesota Public Library. Retrieved 2007-08-02.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mill City Museum. |
- Washburn A Mill Explosion in MNopedia, the Minnesota Encyclopedia
- Mill City Museum Homepage
- Mill City History Portal
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