"The Stones That Ground the Corn" is the story of an Irish country grain mill from its establishment in the traumatic times of the Great Famine to its recent assimilation with one of Northern Ireland's most successful business enterprises. Now in its sixth 'Scott' generation the family business of W & C Scott is a remarkable record of continuity, progress and diversification in the face of a series of challenges both on a world scale and at the local level over a century and a half. Today the highly automated mill produces ...
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"The Stones That Ground the Corn" is the story of an Irish country grain mill from its establishment in the traumatic times of the Great Famine to its recent assimilation with one of Northern Ireland's most successful business enterprises. Now in its sixth 'Scott' generation the family business of W & C Scott is a remarkable record of continuity, progress and diversification in the face of a series of challenges both on a world scale and at the local level over a century and a half. Today the highly automated mill produces annually over 100,000 tonnes of animal feeds on the same site where the original water mill was William Scott in 1850. But this is not simply another book about a family business, however absorbing the Scott's story unquestionably may be. The role the mill has played in the development of the local community is featured in the story that unfolds. There is a chapter on the history of the town of Omagh and a description of the town as it was in William Scott's day. Another provides a brief history of the ancient practice of milling, the world's 'second oldest profession'. And the contribution of a loyal workforce representing characteristic mutual understanding between the employer and employee, is closely woven into the fabric of a fascinating tale which will entertain and inform the local historian, the genealogist, the folklorist and, above all, those who have a strong affinity with Omagh and the region it serves.
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