Compass Mill
Lancaster Co. | Pennsylvania | USA
Watersource: Lititz Run (Creek)
Compass Mill
Located along Pa 772/Rothsville Road about 2 miles SE of Lititz on Lititz Run.
The first grist mill was built on land purchased by George Kline from Hans Bender, whose sons had built the 700' headrace and 900'tailrace to supply an earlier saw mill. The 1756 log mill built was by the Moravian Brethern with water power obtained from Lititz Run.
Inlet arch/arches, one covered by the sloping roof and the other to the left of same. A fire in 1775 destroyed the log mill, but it was rebuilt by the Moravians in 1775, a 2.5 / 3 story limestone mill 42'X 60' in size. The name came from the fact that the mill was laid out using the cardinal points of a compass.
Compass Mill window showing the larde wooden waterwheel in the center of the mill.
The new mill was owned by most of Litiz and Christian Franck in 1777, Christopher Franck and Lititz 1780,1781 & 1782, Philip Fredrich & Lititz 1785-1787, and Mr. Domzart & Lititz in 1797.
The mill was owned by three generations of Kellers starting with John Keller in 1806; then, it was sold by S.E. Keller in 1865 to Benjamin Ritter. Benjamin Bitzer owned the mill from around 1875 and also in 1886. A.W. Shober owned it in 1883 and M.B. Weitzel in 1899. S.E. Bushong secured the mill in 1905.
A possible addition in 1784 is corroberated by a datestone and changes in the stonework. This addition would have occurred around the Franck / Fredrich transfer. The mill was powered by 2 turbines powered by the water from the 700' headrace, dropping 6' from the stream to the turbines, then returning to the Lititz Run via a 900' tailrace.
The inside shot shows a large wheel that quite possibly is an undershot wheel. This may be purely decorative, since undershot wheels weren't known to be very efficient. If it is the original wheel design, it would have to be a pitchback wheel. Another source remarks that two turbines were used to power the mill. The mill produced flour, grist and also operated as a sawmill, either separately or while functioning as a flour or grist mill.
Average output was recorded as 25 barrels of flour/day. In 1925, W. Martin Hess aquired the mill and closed it in 1927. In 1987 through at least 1994, the mill was used as an antique furniture store.
The mill has been maintained well through the years since closing, and still contains some water-powered milling equipment. It is sometimes called the Rome Mill, but that is the mill about a mile upstream and still standing in good shape.