Kymulga Mill & Covered Bridge

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Kymulga Mill
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Kymulga Mill near Childersburg, Alabama.
Kymulga Mill near Childersburg, Alabama.
Nearest city: Childersburg, AL
Coordinates: 33°20′2.38″N 86°17′59.67″W / 33.3339944, -86.2999083Coordinates: 33°20′2.38″N 86°17′59.67″W / 33.3339944, -86.2999083
Built/Founded: 1864
Added to NRHP: October 29, 1976
NRHP Reference#: 76000356 [1]
Governing body: Local
Kymulga CB
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Kymulga Covered Bridge near Childersburg, Alabama.
Kymulga Covered Bridge near Childersburg, Alabama.
Nearest city: Childersburg, AL
Coordinates: 33°20′3.98″N 86°17′58.40″W / 33.3344389, -86.2995556Coordinates: 33°20′3.98″N 86°17′58.40″W / 33.3344389, -86.2995556
Built/Founded: 1861
Added to NRHP: October 29, 1976
NRHP Reference#: 76000356 [1]
Governing body: Local
Kymulga CB
Carries pedestrian traffic
Crosses Talladega Creek
Locale Childersburg, Alabama
Maintained by Childersburg Heritage Committee
ID number 01-61-01 (WGCB)
Design Howe truss
Total length 105 ft (32 m)
Completion date 1861
Coordinates 33°20′2.38″N 86°17′59.67″W / 33.3339944, -86.2999083

Kymulga Mill & Covered Bridge are two locally owned historic landmarks located at Kymulga Park in Talladega County, Alabama, United States. The park is on Grist Mill Road (CR 46) off State Route 76 about 4 miles (6 kilometers) northeast of the city of Childersburg. Coordinates for the park are 33°20′2.38″N, 86°17′59.67″W (33.333994, -86.299908).

Both structures, dating back to the American Civil War, were restored in 1974 and were listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 29, 1976. The Childersburg Heritage Committee purchased the tract in 1988, and with help from the Alabama Historical Commission and the Talladega County Commission, established Kymulga Park. More structural renovations were made as well. There is an admission charge to visit the park, with proceeds being used for upkeep of all structures and nature trails within this historic recreation area.

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[edit] Kymulga Mill

Kymulga Mill is a working gristmill built in 1864 by German contractor G.E. Morris for Confederate Army Captain William H. Forney. Captain Forney died before construction was completed, but his wife allowed Morris to finish it. Union Army soldiers burned most of the gristmills throughout the area during the Civil War, but Kymulga Mill was missed. The mill was sold four times before being purchased by the Childersburg Heritage Committee from latest owner Edward Donahoo in 1988, though it remained in active service through many of those years.

Three water powered turbines ran the four-story mill, including lights, grain elevator and millstones used for grinding grain. Two of its five sets are French buhrs, thought to be the hardest rock in the world. Kymulga Mill continues to operate to this day, though under electricity, still making corn meal with its huge millstones. The building is now a tourist attraction open for guided tours. It also serves as a gift shop and park office.

[edit] Kymulga Covered Bridge

The Kymulga Covered Bridge is a wood & metal combination style covered bridge that spans Talladega Creek, located just east of Kymulga Mill within Kymulga Park. Built in 1861, the 105-foot (32-meter) bridge is a Howe truss construction over a single span. Its WGCB number is 01-61-01. The Kymulga Covered Bridge is one of two 19th century covered bridges extant in Alabama still remaining at its original location. Also located in Talladega County, the Waldo Covered Bridge is the other.

The bridge once provided access to the Old Georgia Road, a Native American trade route which was used by settlers and frontiersmen who ventured the area. Eventually, farms and communities spawned along the former trail. The United States government purchased land adjacent to Kymulga Mill in 1941 for the Alabama Ordnance Works, a military installation. Settlements within the tract had to be relocated. Today, the Kymulga Covered Bridge leads park visitors to a series of nature trails north of Talladega Creek. People may still find remnants of the Old Georgia Road, as well as other traces of the past.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. U.S. National Park Service (2007-08-21).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links