Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Northwestern_Consolidated_Milling_Company an entity of type: Thing

Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company was an American flour milling company that operated about one quarter of the mills in Minneapolis when the city was the flour milling capital of the world. Formed as a business entity, Northwestern produced flour for the half century between 1891 and 1953, when its A Mill was converted to storage and light manufacturing. At its founding, Northwestern was the city's and the world's second largest flour milling company after Pillsbury, with what is today General Mills a close third. The company was touched by an attempt at U.S. monopoly and became part of a Minneapolis oligopoly that valued in 1905 owned almost 9% of the country's flour and grist products. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company
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rdf:langString Northwestern Consolidated Elevator 'A', 119 Fifth Avenue South
rdf:langString Crown Roller Mill, 105 Fifth Avenue South
rdf:langString Standard Mill, 116-118 Portland Avenue South
rdf:langString Minneapolis Boiler Works Building, 121-129 Fifth Avenue South
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rdf:langString Northwestern Consolidated Milling Company was an American flour milling company that operated about one quarter of the mills in Minneapolis when the city was the flour milling capital of the world. Formed as a business entity, Northwestern produced flour for the half century between 1891 and 1953, when its A Mill was converted to storage and light manufacturing. At its founding, Northwestern was the city's and the world's second largest flour milling company after Pillsbury, with what is today General Mills a close third. The company was touched by an attempt at U.S. monopoly and became part of a Minneapolis oligopoly that valued in 1905 owned almost 9% of the country's flour and grist products.
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