Hope Mill (Side view)
16” x 24”
Giclee on Legacy Paper
William and Jane (Stewart) Lang arrived in Otonabee in 1832 from Scotland, purchasing 200 acres of ideal dam land on the Indian River to construct a carding and fulling mill. The original mill was 41 feet by 44 feet and built of heavily mortared limestone. The mill became a vital cog in the local economy, charging six cents per pound for machine carding (straightening of raw wool) and eight cents per yard for fulling (intentionally shrinking the wool before cutting). A shingle mill was added during an expansion in 1858.
William Lang retired in 1873, leasing the mill, the farm, and the dam house to his son-in-law, Richard Hope. By 1892, Hope had transformed the carding and fulling mill into a saw mill, converting all the equipment to accommodate the new saw house. The mill runs on two dam-powered turbines that produce 75 horsepower, or 55 kilowatts. A series of belts, gears, and pulleys deliver the 75 hp to a 48-inch-diameter circular saw. A thickness planer was added to the operation during the Second World War to meet the increased demand for finished lumber.
After 130 years of family ownership and operation, the mill was sold by John Miller Hope to the Otonabee Region Conservation Authority (ORCA) in 1966. The Conservation Authority made extensive repairs to the mill and operated it as a heritage demonstration site until 1993 when funding cuts forced its closure. In 2001, the Friends of Hope Mill, in cooperation with the Otonabee Region Conservation Foundation and ORCA, restored the turbines, saw house, and wood-finishing machinery. Today, the Mill continues to operate as a musueum and heritage demonstration site, replicating the process of cutting and finishing lumber as it was done in pioneer times.
16” x 24”
Giclee on Legacy Paper
William and Jane (Stewart) Lang arrived in Otonabee in 1832 from Scotland, purchasing 200 acres of ideal dam land on the Indian River to construct a carding and fulling mill. The original mill was 41 feet by 44 feet and built of heavily mortared limestone. The mill became a vital cog in the local economy, charging six cents per pound for machine carding (straightening of raw wool) and eight cents per yard for fulling (intentionally shrinking the wool before cutting). A shingle mill was added during an expansion in 1858.
William Lang retired in 1873, leasing the mill, the farm, and the dam house to his son-in-law, Richard Hope. By 1892, Hope had transformed the carding and fulling mill into a saw mill, converting all the equipment to accommodate the new saw house. The mill runs on two dam-powered turbines that produce 75 horsepower, or 55 kilowatts. A series of belts, gears, and pulleys deliver the 75 hp to a 48-inch-diameter circular saw. A thickness planer was added to the operation during the Second World War to meet the increased demand for finished lumber.
After 130 years of family ownership and operation, the mill was sold by John Miller Hope to the Otonabee Region Conservation Authority (ORCA) in 1966. The Conservation Authority made extensive repairs to the mill and operated it as a heritage demonstration site until 1993 when funding cuts forced its closure. In 2001, the Friends of Hope Mill, in cooperation with the Otonabee Region Conservation Foundation and ORCA, restored the turbines, saw house, and wood-finishing machinery. Today, the Mill continues to operate as a musueum and heritage demonstration site, replicating the process of cutting and finishing lumber as it was done in pioneer times.
16” x 24”
Giclee on Legacy Paper
William and Jane (Stewart) Lang arrived in Otonabee in 1832 from Scotland, purchasing 200 acres of ideal dam land on the Indian River to construct a carding and fulling mill. The original mill was 41 feet by 44 feet and built of heavily mortared limestone. The mill became a vital cog in the local economy, charging six cents per pound for machine carding (straightening of raw wool) and eight cents per yard for fulling (intentionally shrinking the wool before cutting). A shingle mill was added during an expansion in 1858.
William Lang retired in 1873, leasing the mill, the farm, and the dam house to his son-in-law, Richard Hope. By 1892, Hope had transformed the carding and fulling mill into a saw mill, converting all the equipment to accommodate the new saw house. The mill runs on two dam-powered turbines that produce 75 horsepower, or 55 kilowatts. A series of belts, gears, and pulleys deliver the 75 hp to a 48-inch-diameter circular saw. A thickness planer was added to the operation during the Second World War to meet the increased demand for finished lumber.
After 130 years of family ownership and operation, the mill was sold by John Miller Hope to the Otonabee Region Conservation Authority (ORCA) in 1966. The Conservation Authority made extensive repairs to the mill and operated it as a heritage demonstration site until 1993 when funding cuts forced its closure. In 2001, the Friends of Hope Mill, in cooperation with the Otonabee Region Conservation Foundation and ORCA, restored the turbines, saw house, and wood-finishing machinery. Today, the Mill continues to operate as a musueum and heritage demonstration site, replicating the process of cutting and finishing lumber as it was done in pioneer times.
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Un-stretched canvas (.75 depth white edge) 16” x 24” ~199.00
Please note that the un-stretched canvas will be shipped in a tube. Your local framing shop can stretch this product of a wooden frame.