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Sawmill Industry
Water powered sawmills were usually built by entrepreneurs who
owned forested land and a little money to invest into a family run
business. The lumber cut was used for the building of homes, towns,
and barns. Some of the lumber was exported to other countries.
The old sawmills with their slow production of about 48 planks
for a 12 hour day at best, are long gone. The mill pits and banks
of the races stand in mute testimony to the long hours and hard
work that once marked these sites.
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Sawmill Gears
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Sawmill Blade
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The exact date of construction and first operation of the vertical
sawmill near today's Owens Creek Campground is unknown, but it is
shown on an 1857 map with the same area indicated as deeded back
to 1808, mentioning rights to water ways. The same 1857 map also
shows 4 additional sawmills on Owens Creek and one on Big Hunting
Creek near the present day Visitor Center.
The sawmill near the present day Owens Creek Campground probably
operated until after the late 1890's. A reconstruction of the mill
was built by the Youth Conservation Corps on the site of the original
sawmill. Construction of the campground eliminated the possibility
of water power operations, but the gears and what would have been
underwater works are all visible from a handicapped accessible boardwalk.
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