Browse Items (108 total) Tags: Mills Browse All Browse by Tag Search Items Previous Page of 6 Next Page Sort by: TitleCreatorDate Added The “last log to be sawed at the Jackson and Tindle Co. saw mill” on a parade float Tags: Logging, Mills, Parades, Pellston The “last log to be sawed at the Jackson and Tindle Co. saw mill” on a parade float Tags: Logging, Mills, Parades, Pellston The “Last Log to be sawed at the Jackson and Tindle Co. Saw mill” Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston A man and a boy in a horse drawn wagon loaded with small milled wood [barrel staves?] Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill featuring mill pond and Maple River Tags: Logging, Maple River, Mills, Pellston Three men loading logs with a crane at the Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Man, rail, and water tower outside office at Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Logs at the Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill featuring mill pond and Maple River Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston George F. McRae Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Crowl Mill, Harbor Springs Lumber Co. Tags: Lumber, Mills Crowl Mill, Harbor Springs. Tags: Lumber, Mills A lumber mill in Harbor Springs. Tags: Harbor Springs, Lumber, Mills Workers at the saw mill at the bottom of the bluff in Cross Village. Tags: Cross Village, Lumber, Mills Frank D. Merchant Lumber Mills on the Bear River, south of Sheridan St. in Petoskey. Tags: Bear River, Lumber, Mills, Petoskey Shaw-Mcmillan Dam on the Bear River in Petoskey. Tags: Bear River, Dams, Lumber, Mills, Petoskey Shaw-Mcmillan Dam on the Bear River taken from Lake St. and Bridge St. in Petoskey. Hankey Dam built in 1882 in the distance. Tags: Bear River, Bridges, Dams, Lumber, Mills, Petoskey, Transportation Previous Page of 6 Next Page Featured Item The Suburban Station in Petoskey in the early 1900s. This was the same site as Petoskey's first depot. It was used only in the summer and closed in the winter.