Dillard Mill State Historic Site

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LocationCrawford County, Missouri, United States
Coordinates37°43′03″N 91°12′24″W / 37.71750°N 91.20667°W / 37.71750; -91.20667[1]
Area131.77 acres (53.33 ha)[2]
Elevation906 ft (276 m)[1]
Dillard Mill State Historic Site
Map showing the location of Dillard Mill State Historic Site
Map showing the location of Dillard Mill State Historic Site
Location in Missouri
Map showing the location of Dillard Mill State Historic Site
Map showing the location of Dillard Mill State Historic Site
Dillard Mill State Historic Site (the United States)
LocationCrawford County, Missouri, United States
Coordinates37°43′03″N 91°12′24″W / 37.71750°N 91.20667°W / 37.71750; -91.20667[1]
Area131.77 acres (53.33 ha)[2]
Elevation906 ft (276 m)[1]
Established1977[3]
Visitors23,331 (in 2022)[4]
Governing bodyMissouri Department of Natural Resources
WebsiteDillard Mill State Historic Site
Dillard Mill Historic District
The mill's still working
Barnard's Horizontal Bran Duster
Location142 Dillard Mill Rd., near Davisville, Missouri
Area58 acres (23 ha)
Built byAdams, Jacob; Mischke, Emil; Klemme, Lester
Architectural styleI-house, Bungalow
NRHP reference No.14001157
Added to NRHPJanuary 14, 2015[5]

The Dillard Mill State Historic Site is a privately owned, state-administered property on Huzzah Creek in Crawford County, Missouri, that preserves a water-powered gristmill.[6] The 132-acre (53 ha) site has been operated as a state historic site by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources under a lease agreement with the L-A-D Foundation since 1975.[7] The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.[5]

A mill was built on Huzzah Creek in 1853 by Francis Wisdom and it was known as the Wisdom Mill. It was destroyed by fire in 1895. The property changed hands, and a new mill, the Mische Mill, was built in 1908. The Mische Mill used an underwater turbine rather than the old waterwheel, and the owners altered the course of the stream and the bluff at the site. The mill was in operation until 1956. It was renamed the Dillard Mill in 1975 when the state took over management of the property. It was dedicated as a historic site in 1977. Restoration of the mill was completed in 1980.[8][9]

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