RED
MILL
RED
MILL POND DAM
RED
MILL POND
38.7601122
LATITUDE : -75.2035194 LONGITUDE
LEWES
AREA OF SUSSEX COUNTY.
Red
Mill Pond located 38.76 latitude x -75.20 longitude, Lewes area
of Sussex county, on Delaware Highway 1, between Nassau and
Overbrook when you travel north. The elevation at Red Mill is 7
feet. Also it is in Broadkill Hundred, on the southeastern
boundary, of Broadkill and Rehoboth-Lewes Hundreds . You can say it
'feeds' into the Broadkill River. Some will want to say the
Broadkill River, through Coolspring Branch, feed it. The east most
'branch' off of the mill pond is also known as Old Mill Creek, or
Branch. Going westward, the branch or creek is the Coolspring's.
A Quaker Meeting House, the only existing one in Sussex county Delaware at the time of the founding of the Cool Spring Presbyterian Church , stood on Cool Spring Creek, one mile in a northeasterly direction on a plot of ground facing what is now known as Red Mill Pond. Old gravestone and a marker are still to be found. Wilmington Morning News, 13 October, 1930.
Coolspring Branch begins several hundred feet from the 'mouth' of the Broadkill and on this branch was Red Mill, a gristmill, owned by Samuel Paynter. Remember we are talking about the pioneer days, around 1750. Up this branch, up meaning going west, was a wool carding mill and a leather tanyard, probably owned by Helmanius Wiltbank on the land granted him by the Duke of York. It is known Red Mill was sold to Elijah Register, timberman and ship owner, and then to Robert Hammond, who is said to have owned it when it burned in 1885.
Wilmington News Journal , February 28, 1927: The Red Mill grist mill, between Overbrook and Nassau, was destroyed by fire early Friday morning. A loss of $15000 was part covered by insurance. A quantity of wheat grain was destroyed also. The owner of the mill, Arthur Sharp, of Nassau, who lives near by discovered the fire and summoned the Lewes Fire Company who arrived too late to save anything.
A Quaker Meeting House, the only existing one in Sussex county Delaware at the time of the founding of the Cool Spring Presbyterian Church , stood on Cool Spring Creek, one mile in a northeasterly direction on a plot of ground facing what is now known as Red Mill Pond. Old gravestone and a marker are still to be found. Wilmington Morning News, 13 October, 1930.
Coolspring Branch begins several hundred feet from the 'mouth' of the Broadkill and on this branch was Red Mill, a gristmill, owned by Samuel Paynter. Remember we are talking about the pioneer days, around 1750. Up this branch, up meaning going west, was a wool carding mill and a leather tanyard, probably owned by Helmanius Wiltbank on the land granted him by the Duke of York. It is known Red Mill was sold to Elijah Register, timberman and ship owner, and then to Robert Hammond, who is said to have owned it when it burned in 1885.
Wilmington News Journal , February 28, 1927: The Red Mill grist mill, between Overbrook and Nassau, was destroyed by fire early Friday morning. A loss of $15000 was part covered by insurance. A quantity of wheat grain was destroyed also. The owner of the mill, Arthur Sharp, of Nassau, who lives near by discovered the fire and summoned the Lewes Fire Company who arrived too late to save anything.
A
local Prime Hook old timer by name of Otis Clifton II or maybe III,
has told that his grandfather, Joseph D. Sharp, operated the Red Mill
grinding 'grist' for flour., in the 1920's. He also tells that Mae
Ritter Dorman; who at one time lived on the SE bank of the pond and
Coolspring Creek, Old Mill Creek , whatever, lets say in the
vicinity, with her husband, deceased, Albert Dorman. Mae was a
Ritter, sister to long time farmers, descendents of Frederick Ritter,
here during the 1920's and 1930's, and still around; was the last to
operate the grist mill, I will say, one of the last.
At
the start of WWII, in 1941, there was an aircraft observation post
located at Red Mill Pond, local Legionnaires from Diamond State
Negro Post of Lewes were assigned to man it.
The
Wilmington News Journal , August 9, 1952, reported Red Mill Pond,
one of the larger ponds in Delaware at 150 acres, has a water depth
from 6 to 7 foot, has an abundant stock of pike and largemouth
bass, Crappies too, sunfish bluegills, and numerous bullhead.
Harold Shaffer operates a gas station and store on the roadway over
the dam, also rents small row boats, has picnic tables and offers
soft drinks and ice cream for fishermen. The pond is fished very
lightly and has a considerable distance of shoreline for fishing.
1959,
or thereabouts, The Cool Spring Power & Water Company created
interest in view of that company's plan to acquire ponds for it's
future use as a water supply. John S Thatcher as principal owner ,
known as 'The Water King”, squelched rumors that fishing was
prohibited on Red Mill Pond and that fishing without charge is
permitted.
1962
, the January 27th , Wilmington Morning News reported
the Millsboro and Red Mill Ponds had been sold and the control of
John S. Thatcher's , Cool Spring Power & Water Company,
was
acquired for $50,000. H. Rodney Sharp, III, was now president of
the new company. Other officers were Jesse Loven of Odessa and
Thomas Burrough, also of Odessa and Mrs. Thacther. Sharp said the
deal also includes an option to purchase Wagamon's Pond at Milton.
Another
Wilmington News Journal article of February 14, 1968, by Dover
Bureau Chief, Larry Martin, gives the account of a carpenter,
nearing retirement age, John McVerry, a native of Pittsburgh living
in Delaware for the past 30 years, who had dreams of building a
water mill driven wood working shop, leased the mill in late 1965, to
expire in 1967, from Cool Spring Power and Water Company, . owned
by Norma Thatcher and her husband, John S. of Berlin, Maryland.
Terms were that McVerry would not pay any money but devote his labor
to the rebuilding of the waterwheel and machinery and restoring the
building which had been vacant five years or more. This he did, and
spent seven months restoring the mill, machinery and shed. He build
a undershot waterwheel which was running his woodworking machinery.
He was in the process of connecting a stone burr wheel when his lease
ran out. He had hopes of grinding grains and selling the product to
the local markets. Since he lost the lease, he has removed his
machinery and moved out of the one room shed.
While
in full bloom the operation McVerry did furniture repair and built
dog houses. Plans were to build truck bodies, and have a roadside
snack bar. The lease was not renewed as Jesse Loven , secretary
treasurer of Cool Spring Water & Power Company, announced the
company had been put up for sale and needed to rid itself of long
term leases. Also McVerry had suffered physical damage from a fall
when he slipped on ice and feel into the waterwheel, bringing his
'dream' to an end.
In the Wilmington Morning News, Thursday January 24, 1974, Keith
C. Myers, Sussex Bureau wrote “ John S. Thatcher, Delaware
Water King, has said he will drain five prime fishing and
recreational ponds in Sussex county if two area developers don't but
them.
Joseph
Hudson and Stanley Thompson of New Dimensions Inc., a Lewes realty
agency, have a
$478,000
option to buy Red Mill Pond, three ponds in Milton, Wagamon's,
Diamond and Lavinia, and Millsboro Pond. This option expires April
12, this year, and Thatcher says “the draining is no threat ,it is
a promise”. “I will drain the ponds at high noon on April 13th
, then I will plant wild rice, harvest it at $8 per pound. Thatcher
feels the 16 foot deep soil be beneath the waters of the ponds is
richer than the bottom of the Nile. Hudson & Thompson have
said they intend to buy the ponds and sell water rights to property
owners near the ponds.
Thatcher
had purchased the ponds in 1958 and took the “water king'' title
since he owned more water that did the state.
Hudson
& Thompson have said the main reason they will purchase is for
long term investment of selling water to the growing towns and
communities and it is possible some arrangements would be made to
allow public fishing” .
Hudson
and Thompson bought the ponds from Thatcher in 1974, says the main
edition of the Wilmington Morning News on Friday, June 6, 1975.
February
20, 1989, Joseph Hudson obtained a permit to dredge 3106 cubic yards
in Red Mill pond at Overbrook Shores.
At
Lewes a meeting was held at 7 pm Wednesday, March 16, 1994 , for Red
Mill cleanup efforts to be presented to local residents, Red Mill
Pond Citizens Advisory Committee and state officials. The privately
owned pond becomes overloaded with waste from a cattle feedlot up
stream, the septic tanks of residential developments on its banks
and the run off from yards and fields near.
Wilmington
News Journal, Monday, October 27, 2008, Molly Murray wrote
“Lewes Man Hopes To Rebuild Red Mill and Its History”.
During Colonial days a dam was built on Cool Spring Branch, northwest
of Lewes, and Red Mill Pond formed. A grist mill ran on the power
from the swift water and grain was brought by tge local farms for
grinding into flour and feed for their live stock.
Now
today Craig Hudson hopes to recreate that early mill which sits on
his family owned property on highway Delaware 1, the Ocean Highway .
Problem is, no one is sure just what the first mill looked like.
The building there now is a replacement and in poor repair. It is
well over fifty years of age, but still a local landmark. During the
deconstruction he has run into red tape with variances', etc,, of the
state due to its location on a major highway. The only history of
Red Mill he has comes from Hazel Brittingham. Lewes historian, who
has told him Red Mill was burnt at least two times to ashes, one time
in 1885, that it was owned by Samuel Paynter, early Delaware
Governor, who had Peter Parker run it for him. The second fire was in
1927, it is told.
The
above are abstracts of Wilmington newspaper articles, some WWW
internet data, gathered by Harrison Howeth of Lewes, Delaware,
May 6, 2017. This document will be an on going project with items
inserted as they may be received in the future.
It is written in this article that my Mother, Mae Ritter Dorman was the last to operate the Red Mill. However, that is not true. Our Dorman family lived adjacent to the Mill but did not run it at any time
ReplyDeleteHello, thanks for this interesting article. What is the source for Paynter's ownership in the 1750s and that there was a gristmill on site at that time? I am looking to use that information in an upcoming work, and am greatly interested in learning more! Additionally, what is the source for Peter Parker's operation of the Mill? I have yet to see that written elsewhere. Thanks!
ReplyDelete