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About Homestead Gristmill In 2000, the craftsmen of Homestead
Heritage carefully documented and dismantled the Teeter mill and restored it in
its new location at Homestead Heritage in central Texas. Given a new life as
Homestead Gristmill, the mill is open to the public year round, grinding fresh
whole wheat flour, corn meal, and other grains much as it did over 230 years
ago. “ Beginning at a
large white oak marked for a corner standing near a small swamp on the south
west side of the brook below the mill…”
This excerpt from a
1768 land deed is the first known written record of our Homestead Gristmill
along the Hollow Brook or Mill Creek in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, when a
German immigrant named Asher Mott decided to sell his share of the family
property to his older brothers, John and Gershom, for £1,000. The property
stayed in the family until 1800 when Robert Emley purchased the mill and 30
acres for $213.30. In 1814 John Teeter, another German immigrant and local resident for over
30 years, acquired the mill and property. By then, the mill was the business and
social center of a village that included six residences and a sawmill located
downstream. This hamlet was referred to as Teetertown. Six years later the mill
was extensively remodeled and turned over to Mr. Teeter’s son-in-law Samuel
Dorland. The Dorland family operated and maintained the mill until
1881. In 1908,
following several ownerships, Philip Sliker purchased the mill, constructed a
new miller’s residence, and began to process flour under the brand name of
“Teetertown Buckwheat Flour.” But in 1918, after 10 years of operation, Mr.
Sliker retired and closed the mill. After it last ground grain in 1918,
the Teeter mill went through a series of owners, most looking for a quaint
country getaway from the bustle of New York City. Left neglected for decades, by
the turn of the 21st century the aged mill was in need of either demolition or
restoration. |