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T. R. Pugh Memorial Park (or The Old Mill) is a re-creation of an 1880s era water-powered grist mill located in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It was used in the opening scenes of the movie classic Gone With The Wind. In 2010, the site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
A mill has been located on the site as early as 1832, but was destroyed three times, and last rebuilt in 1973. The mill currently operates as an undershot gristmill, and houses a store and restaurant. [1] The mill is located approximately 10 miles (16 kilometers) east of the city of Rogers in War Eagle, Arkansas.
"Arkansas". N-Net: the Newspaper Network on the World Wide Web. Archived from the original on February 15, 1997. "Arkansas Newspapers". AJR News Link. American Journalism Review. Archived from the original on March 2, 2000. "United States: Arkansas". NewsDirectory.com. Toronto: Tucows Inc. Archived from the original on November 20, 2001.
The original gristmill was important and constructing an operational mill has been a goal in Renfrew’s strategic plan for a number of years. New grist for an old mill: History is being built at ...
Jenney Grist Mill, Plymouth, built in 1969 on site of 1636 grist mill; Old Schwamb Mill, Arlington, built in 1861 with operations on the site dating to 1684; Old Stockbridge Grist Mill, Scituate, built ca. 1650; Sturbridge Village grist mill, Sturbridge, built 1939; Wayside Inn Grist Mill, Sudbury, built 1929 by Henry Ford; Michigan. Pears Mill ...
It impounds Little Osage Creek, just upstream of Mill Dam Road (County Road 47), between Rogers and the Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport. The dam was built c. 1890 out of coursed stone with a rusticated face. It was built to provide power to a grist mill that served the area, of which only a small portion of the millrace remains visible. The ...
Arkansas is the latest in a series of expansions and upgrades the company has undertaken since 2018 when it announced plans to build a new paper mill in Green Bay at a cost in excess of $500 million.
In 1878, J.N. Smithee bought the newspaper, changed its name to the Arkansas Democrat, and went after lucrative state printing contracts held by the Gazette. The Gazette and the Democrat exchanged words that soon escalated into an exchange of gunfire between the owner of the Democrat and a part-owner of the Gazette .