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804 Gervais Street

Adluh Flour

With its three 101-feet-high reinforced concrete grain elevators and red neon sign, Allen Brothers’ Adluh Flour Mill is one of the Vista’s most enduring and endearing landmarks. Completed in 1920 by the Adluh Milling Company, the elevators were the latest capital improvements undertaken by the Cooner family, who chartered the business in 1914. The site's oldest building, located at 804 Gervais Street, previously housed the W. H. Gibbes Machinery Co. and Carriage Works. The plant operated by Adluh Milling Co. closed in 1925. Following its purchase by the Allen Milling Company of North Carolina in 1926, it reopened as Allen Brothers Milling Company. During World War II, the company won government awards for its efficiency and massive production of “Table-Tested” flour, cornmeal, feeds and mixes. Today, the company is the last of 42 similar mills that once operated in South Carolina. 

  • adluh

    Adluh Flour, 2018. Historic Columbia collection

  • Adluh Milling advert

    Advertisement touting the updated Adluh Milling Company structures, 1920. Reprinted from The Sunday Record, October 24, 1920.

  • W. H. Gibbes Machinery Co. and Carriage Works

    W. H. Gibbes Machinery Co. and Carriage Works, 2018. Historic Columbia collection

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Historic Columbia

© 2023 Historic Columbia

Administrative Offices
1601 Richland Street
Columbia, SC 29201

Tours
All historic house and garden tours start at the Gift Shop at Robert Mills.
1616 Blanding Street
Columbia, SC 29201

Questions? Call (803) 252-7742.

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