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  1. Apr 6, 2018 · When John Cleve Symmes, a congressman from New Jersey, bought more than 250,000 acres along the Ohio River in 1794, hoping to entice settlers to the region, he called it the “Mill Creek” to leave no doubt that it would be possible for new residents to set up mills for grain and lumber.

  2. Mill Creek is a 36.5-mile (58.7 km) long [3] tributary of the Walla Walla River, flowing through southeast Washington and northeast Oregon in the United States. It drains from the western side of the Blue Mountains into the Walla Walla Valley and flows through the city of Walla Walla, which draws most of its water supply from the creek.

    • Mill Creek, I Knew It Was A Popular Fishing Spot
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Was An Ancient Native Campsite
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Had A Gristmill
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Had A Sawmill
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Was A Commercial Route For The Lumber Industry
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Was A Route For The Farming Industry
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Was A Route For The Prospectors
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Was An Important Drainage Basin
    • Mill Creek, I Didn’T Know It Had A Bridge

    Mill Creek, located just south of Haileybury, is a popular fishing spot for many locals. In the spring, boats are often seen on Lake Temiskaming close to the creek’s mouth, and in the summer, you’ll see people fishing at the mouth of the creek.

    The mouth of Mill Creek was an ancient native campsite. One or two thousand years ago, local native populations led semi-nomadic lives and lived in small hunting groups. Groups would assemble to make trips on Lake Temiskaming. The creek was part of the old portage trail from the Montreal River leading to Lake Temiskaming. Sections of the creek were...

    Around 1875, a gristmill (flour mill) was built by Edouard Piché on Mill Creek. The original vision was probably to supply flour to the Mission Saint-Claude and to surrounding small settlements. It was one of the first industrial mills in Northeastern Ontario. The mill was operated thanks to the natural water current. The grist stones from the mill...

    A decade later, C.C. Farr (the founder of Haileybury) bought the gristmill and converted it to a small sawmill to provide lumber to most of the Haileybury’s early buildings. The mill was still using the current from the creek, but the low water flow during the summer was problematic. The sawmill was eventually moved to Haileybury in 1893 where it w...

    White pine logs were cut in the winter and piled on upstream lakes in the Cobalt area. Spring run-off was used as a means of naturally transporting the logs to Lake Temiskaming. The creek was a direct access route between Cross Lake and Lake Temiskaming. Mill Creek was used to transport the logs to Lake Temiskaming, where they were then gathered to...

    Before the railroad and before any roadways were built, the creek was the route to Cross Lake from Lake Temiskaming and a means for farmers to bring produce to lumber camps around Cross, Kerr, and Giroux Lakes.

    Mill Creek was the first route to the silver at Kerr Lake via Cross Lake and was used until the six-mile rail branch line was built in 1906 (from Cobalt to the Kerr Lake area). A railway flag station was established at the small Mill Creek settlement beside the mill, which was called Port Cobalt at the time (and later Argentite). The prospectors co...

    Mill Creek is the final stream from a large drainage basin, which empties into Lake Temiskaming. It carries most of the Cobalt area’s drainage from the following lakes: Green, Clear, Sasaginaga, Brief, Short, Cobalt, Peterson, and Crosswise. These lakes held a large accumulation of refuse from the Cobalt mining days. Most likely, large quantities o...

    There use to be a road from Haileybury heading to Proctor’s Road, which led to the old Argyle Mine. A 120ft long (36m) bridge, used until the 1930’s, crossed over Mill Creek a few hundred feet from the edge of Lake Temiskaming. A footbridge was also built upstream, before the falls. An old wooden retaining wall can still be seen on the south shore ...

  3. Jul 6, 2024 · May 1, 2018 David G. Lewis, PhD. A creek in Salem, Oregon, presently named Mill Creek (GNIS 1163145), was named such in the 1850’s. To aid the flow of the original creek, that had been called Chemeketa Creek, a millrace was constructed between the Santiam River, down Mill Creek and into Pringle Creek to provide power to the Salem Woolen Mill.

  4. The History of Mill Creek. In 1816, the Honourable William Dickson acquired 90,000 acres of property along the Grand River, later to form the North and South Dumfries Townships. After exploring the new lands with Absalom Shade, the pair decided to establish the town of Galt at the intersection of Mill Creek and the Grand River, then known as ...

  5. Mar 19, 2013 · The Molstad House, at 9633 - 95 Avenue, is a private residence and not open to the public. You are now near a modern footbridge across Mill Creek The bridge is number 278 as a small plaque informs you. Proceeding along the creek you come to the large culvert/tunnel that carries Mill Creek under the Old Timers’ Cabin.

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  7. Mill Creek is typical of many American inner-city neighborhoods where the residents are predominantly low-income people of color. Known locally as “The Bottom,” it is one of many such bottoms, hollows, and flats in the US (Moga, 2010). They are at the bottom, both economically, socially, and topographically.

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