History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Wheatland's Mills Give Mumford and Scottsville an Old Work Rhythm
Wheatland's town history ties Mumford and Scottsville to Oatka Creek, 19th-century mills, farm implements, and Main Street commerce.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Wheatland has a local pattern that is more specific than southwest Monroe County countryside. During much of the nineteenth century, Mumford, like Scottsville, was a busy industrial town, with gristmills, sawmills, gypsum mills, woolen mills, blacksmith shops, carriage shops, a malt house, and general stores.
The landscape has a path, too. Oatka Creek winds across Wheatland to the Genesee River, and its waterpower once ran flour and plaster mills. Wheatland became part of Monroe County in 1821, and the town name recognized the wheat already coming from its fertile soil.
Mumford adds its own machinery. James Blair had a farm implement shop on George Street, where he developed a new type of threshing machine. The hamlet story also includes mills, hotels, the Exchange Hotel building, the Donnelly House, and Main Street businesses that made the place feel busy and practical.
Mumford and Scottsville are more interesting when the mill-town layer stays visible. The town reads as farmland, yes, but also as shops, mill wheels, implements, and village business built around work. That is a stronger Wheatland picture than “rural Monroe County.” The old mills and farm-implement story give the town practical history with a little machinery in it.