DCHP-3

mill seat

DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)

This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.

a piece of land on which a flour mill was or could be built; specifically, a lot granted to a person who undertook to build and operate a flour mill there.

Quotations

1796
Read the Petition of John Laurence Esquire, praying for a Mill Seat on the River Humber.
1816
The number of abandoned mill-seats, particularly in parts of the country recently settled, as well as the difficulty of working many of those still in use, shew the same process of draining to be still continuing.
1829
These engines he obtains by procuring for himself . . . a mill-seat, or what the Yankees call a hydraulic privilege, which he enjoys by setting himself down by the side of a rapid of some river or other, as there he may erect as many mills as he pleases.
1833
The fort is to be erected along the bank of a streamlet, which in its devious course through plain presents points well adapted for Mill-seats. . . .