Good Milling And Turning photographs

A handful of nice milling and turning images I discovered:

Constructing a developing on the web site of a new steel mill which will quickly turn out steel for the war requirements, Columbia Steel Co., Geneva, Utah (LOC)

Image by The Library of Congress
Feininger, Andreas,, 1906-1999,, photographer.

Constructing a creating on the site of a new steel mill which will soon turn out steel for the war needs, Columbia Steel Co., Geneva, Utah

1942 Nov.

1 transparency : color.

Notes:
Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.
Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.

Subjects:
Columbia Steel Firm
Steel market
Construction industry
World War, 1939-1945
Mountains
United States–Utah–Geneva

Format: Transparencies–Color

Rights Info: No identified restrictions on publication.

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

Element Of: Farm Security Administration – Office of War Info Collection 12002-60 (DLC) 93845501

Basic details about the FSA/OWI Colour Photographs is accessible at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac

Larger resolution image is accessible (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a34850

Get in touch with Number: LC-USW36-818

Mill @ Berry College

Image by .:[ Melissa ]:.
Old mill at Berry College in Rome, GA.

From: www.berry.edu/vtour/html/mountain/oldmill.html

Constructed in 1930, the Old Mill boasts an iron hub which had originally been of service at Hermitage, an early manufacturing neighborhood near the Shannon village between Rome and Calhoun, Georgia, and was a gift to Berry from The Republic Mining (bauxite) and Manufacturing Organization.

The wooden overshot waterwheel, regarded as a single of the biggest in the globe at 42 feet in diameter, was constructed by student workers. For many years, the mill was operated by Mr. Green Berry Goodson, a white-bearded miller who ground Berry-grown corn into meal and grits. Water is piped directly from Berry’s reservoir lake to the wheel. Once primed, the force of gravity is strong adequate to push the water up the stone column, and over the wheel, causing it to turn.