Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District

The Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District encompasses a well-preserved small late 19th-century mill complex with surviving 18th-century remnants a Gorge and East Roads in Clarendon, Vermont. The complex includes a house, barn, mill and other outbuildings, and the nearby Kingsley Covered Bridge. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.[1]

Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District
The Kingsley Mill
Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District is located in Vermont
Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District
Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District is located in the United States
Kingsley Grist Mill Historic District
LocationEast St. & Gorge Rd., Clarendon, Vermont
Coordinates43°31′27″N 72°56′26″W
Area3 acres (1.2 ha)
Built1778 (1778)
ArchitectPowers, Nichols Montgomery; Horton, Timothy K.
Architectural styleFederal, Queen Anne
NRHP reference No.07001170[1]
Added to NRHPNovember 8, 2007

Description and history

The Kingsley Grist Mill complex is located southeast of the junction of Gorge and East Roads, a short way southeast of the Rutland Southern Vermont Regional Airport. Roughly 3 acres (1.2 ha) in size, it includes a c. 1778 house, 1885 horse barn, and a mill complex, most of whose elements date to the 1880s. The district also includes the foundational remnants of a second mill and the mill dam, a timber crib dam whose main structure was washed away by flooding in 1927. An old alignment of the main road connecting Clarendon to Shrewsbury is also believed to pass through the property (now serving as its main drive).[2]

The house was built about 1778 by Nathaniel Crary, a veteran of the American Revolutionary War. Crary also built the first mills on the site, which were washed away by flooding in 1818. Crary sold the property in 1825 to Chester Kingsley, who built new mills on the site. His son Horace enlarged the house to its present configuration about 1835. Chester Kingsley's carding mill was destroyed by flooding in 1869, and the grist mill on the site underwent several upgrades in the 19th century, before being completely rebuilt for John Kingsley by Nichols Powers, generally better known as a builder of covered bridges. The grist mill was operated by the Kingsley's until 1935.[2]

See also

References

Media related to Kingsley Grist Mill at Wikimedia Commons

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