Neighbor News
Soule: A Magical Visit To Sanborn Mills Farm
What's it like to travel back in time? I'll tell you my story.

It's hard to know what’s most enchanting about Sanborn Mills Farm in Loudon. Is it the lovely garden beside the restored 1800s barn? Is it the working gristmill? Or the water-powered sawmill? Perhaps the sum of all the parts is the magic of Sanborn Mills Farm. That is the magic of serenity and joy.
The farm was founded in the 1770s by John Sanborn, who fought in the Revolution. John's son Edmund built the sawmill and gristmill, where farmers brought bundles of wheat or oats to be ground. While waiting for the miller to finish, the farmer could have his ox or horse shod at the blacksmith shop next to the gristmill. The shop also sold hinges, ax heads, or anything metal. Across the road, the sawmill cut logs used to frame barns and build houses.
Miles Smith, the founder of my farm, would have hitched his oxen to a wagon loaded with corn and driven them ten miles to Sanborn Mills. While there, he could buy door hinges or other items hammered out on the forge. With transportation so difficult, the early settlers must have been glad to patronize a place with multiple goods and services – kind of an 1800s mini-mall for residents of Loudon and Pittsfield.
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After Albin, Edmund’s great-grandson, died in 1972, much of the farm machinery was sold and the buildings sagged until Colin and Paula Cabot bought the place in 1997. The Cabots have restored the buildings and returned the property to its former glory, and today the farm is in the best shape it's ever been.
Raised beds of flowers, herbs, and vegetables surround a gurgling fountain that welcomed husband Bruce and me to a pop-up lunch in August. Antique cobblestones salvaged from the "Big Dig" on Boston's Milk Street were used to make stone paths through the garden. Sitting at the picnic table overlooking the garden, I forgot about the unfinished chores on my farm. I sipped some Sanborn Mills blueberry lemonade sweetened with local honey, and the zen of the garden swept away busy thoughts.
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Then came lunch in the dining room tucked under the original barn. Lunch was delicious. Head chef Kelly Fahey sourced the crisp salad and savory pork main dish from the farm and nearby farms.
Carole Soule is the co-owner of Miles Smith Farm in Loudon, N.H. She raises and sells beef, pork, lamb, eggs, and other local products. She can be reached at carolesoule60@gmail.com