Engine-powered mill, located at 147 Słowackiego Street, was established before WWI by a Jewish partnership. The surviving building is a one-storey wooden structure with a gable roof covered with roofing felt. A power station is adjacent to that building on the northern side. It is a building with a gable roof covered with roofing felt. The mill was initially powered by a gas engine, had four pairs of rollers, a barley processing machine and cleaning machines. In the 1930s, it started to be powered by electrical energy. At that time, the output was about 10 tonnes of grain a day. In 1946, the mill was nationalised, and in 1964 it was reconstructed. At that point, the masonry foundations were constructed. Also, to the east, an office section was added to the mill - it was a wooden building lower than the production section. Currently, the mill is still in operation.

The entry was written on the basis of the text Katalog zabytków budownictwa przemysłowego w Polsce, issued since 1958, on the permission of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. 

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