
War Eagle Mill celebrated its centennial rebirth in 1973 when Jewell
A. and Leta Medlin and Zoe Medlin Caywood built the fourth mill on the original site and foundation.
The new mill stands as an authentic reproduction of the 1873 mill in preserving the historical significance of the gristmill as the hub of the rural community during the late 1800's and early 1900's. The War Eagle River powers a set of stone buhr grinders in the new mill by an 18-foot undershot waterwheel.
The first mill was built in the 1830's by Sylvanus Blackburn, but washed away in 1848. The second mill was burned by order of a Confederate general to prevent the Union Army's capture and use of the mill. James A.C. Blackburn, son of Sylvanus, reconstructed a third mill in 1873.
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