Laurel Mill

Laurel Mill
Current statusDemolished; part of a dam bulwark remains
LocationLaurel, Maryland, U.S.
Serving canalPatuxent River
Serving railwayBaltimore and Ohio Railroad
OwnerNicholas Snowden family
Further ownership
  • Tiffany family of Baltimore (1850s–1860s)
  • Others (1860s–1920s)
Coordinates39°06′36″N 76°51′28″W / 39.11°N 76.8577°W / 39.11; -76.8577
Construction
Built1811
Demolished1940s, after 1929 closure

The Laurel Mill was a multi-use mill located along the Patuxent River in Laurel, Maryland. Built by Nicholas Snowden on the site of an earlier grist mill, Laurel Mill operated intermittently between 1811 and 1929, manufacturing flour, cloth, cotton duck and other cotton products, and window shades. Between 1835 and 1851 the mill was operated by Horace Capron, who had married into the Snowden family, and the Patuxent Manufacturing Company, who also established the town of Laurel Factory, which was incorporated as Laurel in 1870.

Laurel Mill closed by 1929 and was razed in the 1940s, and the grounds of the mill now include the City of Laurel Municipal Pool. The Laurel Museum currently sits opposite the Laurel Mill site, in a home constructed by the mill company.