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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




MILLING

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Thompson Mill was located north of Dubuque just south of Sageville. The mill with power supplied by the Little Maquoketa River could process 125 bushels of grain daily;. It was purchased in 1890 by Joseph A. RHOMBERG along with 600 acres of land he hoped to make into a resort. (1) (Photo in 1888)
Loemker, Herman J., 1868-1937, “[Old mill (Thompson's) near Sageville, Iowa],” Loras College Digital Collections, accessed December 29, 2015, https://digitalcollections.loras.edu/items/show/297.

MILLING. The principal types of mills built in Dubuque were constructed for the processing of flour, oatmeal, or spice. Important flourmills were the ROCKDALE MILL, Pratt and Company, Thomas-Rogers Company, IOWA PACIFIC MILL and the ROOSTER FEEDS. Oatmeal mills were the CALEDONIA MILLS and the DUBUQUE OATMEAL MILL. Two spice mills operating in Dubuque were the KEY CITY SPICE MILLS and the MCFADDEN COFFEE AND SPICE COMPANY.

Mills in Dubuque prospered because of the city's location near the MISSISSIPPI RIVER over which raw and finished products could be transported. Once lands to the north and west were settled and Dubuque was no longer the closest source of processing, mills generally found themselves unable to compete for business and closed.

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Source:

!. Kruse, Len. "Busy Nutwood Park, Melody Mill Now Just Memories," Telegraph Herald, March 17, 1998, p. 12