MISSION MILL MUSEUM
'Mission Mill Museum' is a historic museum located in Salem, Oregon, United States. It features working displays of a woolen mill, the Thomas Kay Woolen Mill, and several historic Salem buildings that have been relocated to the mill site.
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| Contents |
| Mill history |
| Museum |
| External links |
Mill history
The original Kay Woolen Mill was opened in 1890, by Thomas L. Kay, whose family eventually founded Pendleton Woolen Mills. The workforce of 50 labored 60-hour weeks. In 1895, a fire destroyed much of the mill and outbuildings.
By 1898 the mill had been rebuilt. Two additional stories were added in 1941.
Museum
The museum includes a water power interpretive exhibit by Portland General Electric. The exhibit demonstrates how the mill was run using the water from Mill Creek.
==Structures on the National Register of Historic Places==
★ Jason Lee House (1841) - with the Parsonage, the earliest known frame buildings in Salem, and perhaps the oldest remaining in the state
★ Methodist Mission Parsonage (1841)
★ John D. Boon House (1847)
★ Pleasant Grove Presbyterian Church (1858)
★ Thomas Kay Woolen Mill (1898)
External links
★ Mission Mill Museum
★ Photos of Mission Mill Village from Salem Public Library
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