Collection + Exhibits

Object of the Month

 

Get a glimpse of the past with highlighted artifacts from the museum’s collection.

With more than 10,00 artifacts in our collection, there’s a lot to learn about. Come along with us as we unearth one item a month and take a deep dive into its use, significance, and any community stories connected to its history, meaning, or purpose.

From archival photographs to awards, manufacturing tools and inventions to locally made holiday ornaments from a once renown manufacturer—get a glimpse into the past, right now.

February 2024: Dye Tubes

It’s February, which means our 2024 gallery “Unseen Hands, The Hidden Elements of Labor” opened to the public! This month, we’re highlighting dye tubes from the Bates Dyeing Facility, offering a glimpse at just one of the dozens of objects we have on display this year. Bates Manufacturing had its in-house laboratory that developed new dyes and ensured the quality of the pigments used in its products. Early in the mill’s history, the workers would dye only one color daily (i.e., Monday – blue, Tuesday – yellow, etc.). Any dye left over at the end of the day was dumped directly into the Androscoggin River, making the mill one of the largest polluters. This practice and the Androscoggin’s overall condition helped inspire Maine Senator Ed Muskie to get the Clean Water Act passed by Congress in 1972.

Photo by Tanja Hollander

Did you miss a past Object of The Month?

We’ve gone through a treasure trove of items from our collection over the years. Scroll through and see what you may have missed.

October 2022: Bates Manufacturing Company  Medal for Valued Service

October 2022: Bates Manufacturing Company Medal for Valued Service

This medal was awarded to the Bates Manufacturing Company in 1951 for 100 years of valued service. The Jordan Marsh Company bestowed this medal to the mills, “commemorating our New England centennial associates whose integrity of character and preservation of American...

September 2022: Mill Workers

September 2022: Mill Workers

In honor of Labor Day this month, the museum would like to recognize and honor the hard work and dedication of the mill workers of the late nineteenth and twentieth  centuries. These three undated photographs show mill workers at different parts of the textile making...

August 2022: Morin Brick Workers

August 2022: Morin Brick Workers

This is a photograph from the 1930s of Morin Brick Workers.  The son of French Canadian immigrants, John Morin and his family founded Morin Brick Co. in 1912. Using the clay-like soil of the Androscoggin region, Morin Brick made bricks that were used in the...

July 2022: American Bobbin Co. Panoramic Photograph

July 2022: American Bobbin Co. Panoramic Photograph

This photograph was taken in October 1947, outside of the company’s office on 47 Whipple Street in Lewiston. American Bobbin Co. started in 1945, when it absorbed the name and assets of a Rhode Island corporation that had functioned since 1920. The company was a part...

June 2022: Cotton

June 2022: Cotton

This month we are featuring cotton: the product from which most textiles originate. In honor of Juneteenth, the holiday commemorating the emancipation of enslaved peoples in the United States, we’d like to acknowledge the dark history associated with cotton, and thus...

May 2022: Valuation of Machinery Booklet

May 2022: Valuation of Machinery Booklet

Museum L-A’s May Object of the Month is the York Manufacturing Company's Valuation of Machinery booklet from 1853 to 1892. Built on Saco Island in 1831, the York Manufacturing company milled cotton goods, operating with 1,000 workers by 1839. It’s predecessor was the...

April 2022: Photograph of a Brick Maker

April 2022: Photograph of a Brick Maker

This undated photograph shows a man standing on a brick cart in front of an impressive pile of bricks. The worker puffs a cigarette while laboring in the Dennis Brickyard. On his hands, you can see large white gloves. Without these special gloves, the skin on a...

March 2022: Photograph of Female Workers

March 2022: Photograph of Female Workers

Happy Women’s History Month. Female weavers played a huge part in the successful operation of the Bates Mills, working to create bedspreads, sheets, and other beautiful textile pieces. This month, we are highlighting a photograph circa 1910 of three female employees....

February 2022: Whitin-Schweiter Automatic Filling Winder

February 2022: Whitin-Schweiter Automatic Filling Winder

This automatic filling winder made sure that bobbins were fully wound with yarn in preparation for weaving on a jacquard loom. Work on this machine involved placing cones of yarn on reels or spindles of the machine; threading yarn through the various guides;...

Help preserve Maine MILL artifacts

Antique and vintage items need a lot of maintenance to prolong their lifetime. Help us to preserve and care for these historical items and representations of our community’s history by donating today.