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    Cook's Old Mill centerpiece of a historic W.Va. landscape

    GREENVILLE, W.Va. โ€” I rarely have the opportunity to show my daughters a back-road attraction in West Virginia that they haven't seen before. They've joined me on hundreds of adventures to remarkable places both on and off the beaten track.

    Each carries a W.Va. Gazetteer in her car and is usually up for a day trip, no matter the weather. So, it was a surprise and delight to be able to introduce the two of them to Cook's Old Mill, which they had each driven past many times but had never stopped to see.

    Millstones tumble along the mill pond at Cook's Old Mill.
    Millstones tumble along the millpond.

    Several weeks ago, weโ€”myself, the eldest, and the middlestโ€”found ourselves on Route 122 west of Greenville in Monroe County, about 20 minutes south of Union. A bald eagle had stopped us smack in the middle of the road. โ€œWas that a bald eagle?โ€ we asked, trying to contain our excitement, desperately trying to get a good photo. We spoke about that eagle for days and never did get a clear shot of it.

    However, we were coming up on Greenville, a small town that, like many small towns in Appalachia, used to be more than it is. I knew Cookโ€™s Old Mill was just on the side of the road and wanted to make a bitty stop at this very cool place โ€” especially once I found that neither had been there.

    Privately owned, Cook's Old Mill has been restored and expanded through the years. Fred and Barbara Ziegler bought it in 2002 and now welcome visitors to walk the grounds, take photos, and picnic by its mill dam's waterfall. The concrete dam was built in 1906 and incorporated hundreds of horseshoes used as reinforcing material. The Zieglers live across the street in the lovingly restored Millerโ€™s House. They will, if home, answer the door and provide more information and a tour, if convenient.

    The mill stream at Cook's springs from within caverns.
    Mill-stream springs from within caverns.

    According to the information board near the entrance to the mill, the landmark โ€œwas built in 1857 on the original foundation and site of an earlier mill, constructed in approximately 1796. The property surrounding this mill includes a dam, millpond, tailrace, and stream and consists of 3-ยฝ acres. The mill was an important part of the community, serving as a gathering place. Construction elements include massive hand-hewn, mortise-and-tenon posts, and beams.โ€

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    This is one of my favorite places to bring visitors on a day trip through Monroe and Summers counties. A snack at one of the picnic tables or on a blanket near the creek, soft dappled sunlight shining through the trees, the song of water flowing over the damโ€”these are enough to recharge my brain and soothe my soul.

    We meander around, peering through the windows and admiring a small double-roller mill displayed outside its main doors. We make our way across the wooden bridge and the overflow. It's here we can see where the waterwheel used to turn, slowly grinding corn and wheat for families who settled along Indian Creek. It is also the perfect place to pull up a stone to sit on and view the water flowing.

    The girls walk around the millpond, fed by a spring the flows out of a system of caverns about a quarter-mile upstream. On one of these trips, Iโ€™m going to hike up and see the spring. For now, I'm content to sit and listen to the water in my own reverie. As remnants of Hurricane Florence threatened our tranquil detour, I snapped some photos, and we made our way back to the car.

    Formerly known as Centreville, Greenville is notably located along the Mountain Music Trail and hosts musical events throughout the year. The entire area is steeped in history from the late 1770s onward and includes plantations, prehistoric sites, and the remnants of a Civil War encampment.


    Geologic mystery in Monroe County visible only from the air

    David Sibray peers into a cave system in southern West Virginia.
    David Sibray peers into a cave system in southern West Virginia.

    Unbeknownst to many residents of the Greenbrier Valley in southern West Virginia, a six-mile crack in the surface earth has been hiding beneath their feet.

    Visible only from the air, the โ€œMonitor Lineamentโ€ is one of the strangest landforms in this scenic landscape of bluegrass pastures, vanishing brooks, and healing springs.

    Coursing in a straight line across northern Monroe County from near Sinks Grove to Second Creek, the lineament is seemingly impossible to perceive at eye level. READ THE FULL STORY ON THE MYSTERY HERE.


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    Lisa Stansell Galitz
    Lisa Stansell Galitz
    Lisa Stansell Galitz is a writer and publisher renowned for her expertise in travel in West Virginia. She is former publisher of Daytripper magazine and a recognized expert of waterfalls in the Virginias.

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