top of page
IMG_8328_edited.jpg

Mill house Museum

Occoquan Mill House Museum

314 Mill Street, Occoquan, VA

 

Open everyday 11am-4pm, except Wednesday

FREE Admission

 

In the latter part of the 18th century, the Quaker Nathaniel Ellicott purchased what remained of the original iron works complex established by John Ballendine in the 1750s and converted it to milling operations. His main, or Merchants Mill, was advanced for the time, and may have been the first automated gristmill in the young United States of America. The main mill continued to be used in one fashion or another until 1924, when a generator fire in the Occoquan Electric Light and Power Company destroyed the main structure. Although the small attached Mill House, where the mill’s administrator worked, remained unscathed, decades of subsequent neglect led to its near collapse. 

​

Eventually, the Alexandria Water Company purchased the Mill House in the middle of the 20th century when it began construction of the Occoquan dams. First restoring it for use as office space, the company’s successor, the Fairfax Water Authority (now known as Fairfax Water) eventually turned the structure over to the Town of Occoquan, who leases it to the Occoquan Historical Society for use as a museum.

IMG_0024.jpg

Museum Operations

​

Daily operations of the Mill House Museum are run by the Occoquan Historical Society. Over 400 items are catalogued and many of these are on permanent display.

​

Learn more about the Museum and the Occoquan Historical Society.

bottom of page