by Tim Richards
Author's note: This posting follows three earlier postings on this website to complete the chronology of the Truro (Mass.) Tide Mill from 1790 to 1878, at least partially filling the historical gap. Thus far, the research has been based primarily on maps, histories, census records, deeds, and probate documents. However, if a proposed tidal restoration project proceeds and requires excavation around the mill site, that project could provide an exciting opportunity for an archaeological study of the mill.
Small-scale grist mills powered by the tide had little place in the industrializing economy of the late 19th century. The demise of the Truro Tide Mill, however, occurred earlier than that of most other North American tide mills.
When the proprietors upgraded the Truro Tide Mill in 1844 (see “A Better Mill for Truro” on this website) the Truro fishing fleet and associated industries were prospering. The town’s population had increased twenty-four percent between 1830 and 1840 and was continuing to grow.
To be sure, storm clouds were on the horizon. Truro grain production declined between 1840 and 1850, even as the town’s economy and population grew. Millers should have been the first to spot this development, but perhaps the decline was not apparent by the early 1840s, even to millers.
Continue reading “The Truro Tide Mill’s Final Years”