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[Block 35B]
John B. Tison owned this horse-powered mill.
This was probably a grist mill, that is, a mill to grind grain like
wheat and corn into flour. It was called a horse mill because it
was not powered by the wind like a windmill or by water like other
mills, but by a horse or a team of horses. Most horse mills were
powered by a horse who walked on a treadmill set up as an inclined
plane. As the horse walked, he stayed in one place but the treadmill
moving under his hooves turned the gears which made the mill function.
Since St. Louis had no streams running directly through the town,
a horse mill or windmill were the only means of powering machinery
in the days before steam and electrical power.
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