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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