Two men on a mill : The story of the restoration of Baxter's Mill by Castonguay

(6 User reviews)   1659
By Samuel Smirnov Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - The Rare
Castonguay, A. Harold, 1905-1979 Castonguay, A. Harold, 1905-1979
English
Imagine inheriting a broken-down, centuries-old mill and thinking, 'Sure, I can fix that.' That's exactly what A. Harold Castonguay did, and 'Two Men on a Mill' is his no-BS account of resurrecting Baxter's Mill from a dusty wreck into a working piece of history. This isn't some serene restoration story—it's a battle against rot, gravity, and the million-dollar question: how do you put a massive water wheel back together without losing your mind? Most of us see an old building and just picture a nice photo op. But Castonguay dives headfirst into the chaos, sweating through headaches like sourcing beams from the 1700s and arguing with stubborn foundations. The real mystery isn't whether the mill will run—it's whether two guys with grit, zero luck, and probably too much coffee can remake a relic from scratch. If you've ever tried to fix a stubborn fixer-upper or dreamed of saving an old piece of America, this book is a secret map through the madness. Spoiler: the mill survives, but the journey? Pure, unadorned adventure.
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I picked up 'Two Men on a Mill' expecting a dry old diary, but this thing crackles with real life. A. Harold Castonguay wrote it in the 1960s, but his voice pulls you right into the dusty air of an abandoned mill in Massachusetts in the 1950s. No robot stuff—just raw history.

The Story

Okay, so there's this sitting-rotted-for-decades mill built from huge, hand-made oak beams. Mills that big don't just need a coat of paint—we're talking disintegrated roofs, massive gears stopped dead since the Great Depression. And Castonguay and his sidekick John Pearson become the two men in the title—the only two clowns crazy enough to say 'Let's rebuild the 1710-era Baxter's Mill.' They scavenge dumpsters, wrestle beams that weigh more than a car, and take copious physical blows delivering a giant waterwheel back to life. The book isn't just about engineering; it's about finding clever—and desperate—solutions to structural monsters. No villain except decades of weather and wood wasps.

Why You Should Read It

This isn't a lecture about historical preservation. It's a private conversation with a grandfather who rolled his sleeves up and fought for a building nobody else remembered first-hand. Castonguay talks everyone's language—you really feel the shock when a load fails or the single twist of luck that lets some antique workshop tool stay usable after 200 years. But the kicker? Underneath all the wood shavings and torn half-spikes is a real-world goal story many can read and enjoy. Without pretense weight, it portrays how progress creeks-forward: one new splashed with improbable teamwork moment 't smashing your project ending. It had me roaming into town to find mill structures reanimated elsewhere months later specifically. That many here books on our 'must-do bucket projects' sit produced—for general readers soaking Old Craft not history quiz-burgers.

Final Verdict

Got an armchair from which you want see ordinary start-up fury, scratch that save restoration fix save and how messy gritty no money but full-spirited operation is great head show this raw gem. This book beats for multiple folks absolutely not building readers that get particular excitement mechanic after: building type 80 self projects actually succeeding improbable may stick pre-readings rather two mill enthusiasts especially so many college townish workshop on strong authorial presence alone picks. Pop!



🔖 Public Domain Notice

This is a copyright-free edition. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.

George Anderson
2 years ago

Having explored several resources on this, I find that the breakdown of complex theories into digestible segments is masterfully done. Truly a masterpiece of digital educational material.

Margaret Lee
11 months ago

As someone working in this industry, I found the insights very accurate.

Kimberly Perez
8 months ago

As someone working in this industry, I found the insights very accurate.

Patricia Miller
2 years ago

I took detailed notes while reading through the chapters and the wealth of information provided exceeds the average market standard. I'm genuinely impressed by the quality of this digital edition.

Thomas Jones
7 months ago

Great value and very well written.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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