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Hop Brook Historical Information
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| Detail of an 1830 Map of Northborough-
click for larger image (used with permission from the
Northborough Historical Society) |
Hop Brook boasts one of the few continuously-occupied
mills in the state still in commercial use. The mill, currently
"Armeno Coffee Roasters" at 75 Otis Street, is shown
on an 1830 map of Northborough as "Dr. Ball's Mill"
just below the pond at the junction of Bummett Brook and Hop
Brook.
Dr. Stephen Ball built the mill on Hop Brook
some time in the early 1800's. Dr. Ball, a member of the Ball
family for whom Ball Hill is named, had an interesting assortment
of businesses in town. He was a physician for 54 years and
had the first apothecary in Northborough where many young
apothecary apprentices learned the business. He also had a
shoe business, a millinery business, and extensive farming
interests.
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| Armeno Cereal Company (1945) on Hop Brook
below Smith Pond |
Although the exact construction date of the mill
is unknown, a man born in 1813 remembered watching the mill
being built when he was a young boy. It was originally a combination
saw mill and grist mill. The millpond, on the opposite side
of Otis Street, may have been named after a Mr. Smith, who
owned and operated the mill sometime between 1861 and 1900.
For most of the 20th century the mill was owned and operated
by the Kalenian family. Oscar Kalenian started a bulgur business
in Worcester in 1892 in the same building as the Shredded
Wheat company. At the time, the two companies shared carloads
of wheat.A few years later the Shredded Wheat Co. moved to
Niagara Falls, N. Y. and in 1908 the
Armeno Cereal Company moved to the mill situated
"amid the beautiful tree-covered hills of Northborough,
Mass., and beside a narrow road that winds into a picturesque
valley." Oscar Kalenian died shortly after the move and
his younger brother, Armen, took over the business. The mill
burned around 1910 and was rebuilt by Mr. Kalenian and a local
man (who worked for trolley fare and food) for $2,000. Armen
Kalenian was president of the Armeno Cereal Company from 1915
until his death in 1972.
Wheat to produce the bulgur was brought in from
the station on Otis Street by the train load and emptied into
a storage bin under the retail shop. The bin was large enough
to hold a railroad car of wheat - about 4,000 bushels - once
the local children had compacted the wheat and pushed it to
the back of the bin by tromping on it. The wheat was cleaned,
washed, and then stream-cooked in a rotary cooker, nearly
three stories high. The process was so noisy that it was enclosed
in walls filled with sand and 6" thick doors. After it
was cooked, the wheat was dried, de-branned, and ground into
four different granulations. Early on the process entailed
intensive manual labor and many family members and neighbors
worked at the mill. Armen's grandson Paul says, "the
13 steps to finished product meant that hand labor would hand
carry the partially made product upstairs 13 times per lb
of bulgur sold."
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After Armen's son Aram, a Worcester Polytechnic
Institute graduate, became Vice President and Engineer in
the 1930's, he automated the mill making it possible to run
the process with fewer people and developed a machine to de-bran
the cooked bulgur.
During the Korean War, the mill produced wheat
products used by the Van Brode Mills in Clinton to make K-Rations.
In 1962 they supplied the cracked wheat that Van Brode Mills
used to make survival biscuits for bomb shelters.
After Armen Kalenian's death, his grandson Paul
took over the mill. He removed the machinery no longer being
used, put a new steel roof on the building and put in new
windows, replacing the door where the wheat was unloaded.
Over the next 20 years, he operated several businesses from
the mill, including a lumber and rough furniture business,
and a large commercial boiler and wood furnace manufacturing
business, which operated as The G&S Mill, Inc., in honor
of the original grist and saw mill. He and his wife lived
in the mill from 1972 to 1976 as well as operatingtheir businesses
from that location.
In 1994 Paul Kalenian started Armeno Coffee Roasters,
Inc. They import coffee from about 25 countries around the
world and roast and package it for wholesale and retail sales.
Two years ago, Paul Kalenian sold the business to two of his
employees, Chuck Coffman and John Parks. They are continuing
the gourmet coffee roasting business and have added a wine
room and holiday gift basket production to the business.
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| One of the original grinding wheels in
the lower level of the mill |
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| Grain buckets |
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| Wooden chutes in the lower level of the
mill - the diesel engine that replaced the original water
wheel is just visible at the right edge of the picture.
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Parts of the bulgar making process can still
be seen along side the modern coffee roasting and grinding
equipment. The wooden chutes that delivered the coarse, medium,
and fine grinds of wheat for bulgur, tabouli, and couscous
are near the coffee roasters. In the lower level of the mill
there are still elevator belts with the small buckets that
carried the wheat upstairs to the boiler as well as one of
the original stone grinding wheels used to hull wheat. The
area where the wheat roaster once was is now the cigar shop.
The small shop at the front of the building which originally
sold Armenian food, remains a retail shop now selling Armeno
coffee along with tea, chocolates, jams and other treats.
Sources:
Baker, C.E. 1945. "Bulgur, Wheat Cereal
Staple from the Near and Middle East Now is Made in Massachusetts."
American Miller and Processor, September 1945. pp. 42 - 45.
Balfour, B. 1962. "Northboro Firm May Get
"Survival Biscuits" Contract." The Evening
Gazette. Worcester. Monday, March 5, 1962.
Northborough History by Rev. Josiah Coleman Kent,
1921
Interviews with Paul Kalenian,
Chuck Coffman, John Parks, and Ms. Margaret Kalenian
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| Modern coffee roaster in
the upper level of the mill today |
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| Armeno Coffee Roasters Ltd
- 2003 |
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