The feed sack sewing machine is part of the first floor museum. I have had people ask me what a feed bag sewer (as in sanitary sewer) is. We are talking about the machine that sews the bags closed. Note the large black counterweight to the left that offset the weight of the machine. Nancy tells a story about Don Larimore who worked at the Mill in the 1950s and visited recently. He sewed his finger into a bag. After a few choice words, he just cut the bag open and tried again. Don also told us about raising ten thousand peeps at the Mill on the third floor and the waste removal challenges.
It seems appropriate for April fools day to talk about the safe. Nancy always introduces the safe as the one Jesse James blew up on his way through town. This was not true but it made a fun story. When we bought the Mill in 2005 the safe was sitting in the middle of the first floor and it took about a year for us to find enough people to move it up against the wall. It was on wheels but it was very heavy. I’m hoping we will find it in the basement when we clean up from the fire. The first time we opened the safe- its entire contents was a roll of masking tape. We assumed the crafters felt that was precious.
The first floor of the Mill was full of wonderful things. It was mostly a museum but we fed people here, had music concerts, displayed Nancy’s collection of feed sack clothes and quilts. It was the home of the big safe and the feed mixer and the Mill equipment museum. I will talk more about it in future pages.
Before I move on to more of the Mill, I thought I would devote a page to the window dressings for the Emporium. Nancy and Sally Vereb were the ones who put these together with a little lighting help from myself. Nancy learned how to make the snowflakes from U-Tube and found the carolers and snowman.
We had some inventory at the Emporium that was on consignment although that was not our business model. Both sets were from people closing out houses. One set was from a fellow nut grower friend of Nancy’s and the other was a very generous family from Chapel on the Hill that asked that the proceeds be given to a Romanian orphanage.
























