Fox River Paper Company Historic District
Fox River Paper Company Historic District | |
The Fox River Paper Company Mills | |
| Location | 405-406, 415 S. Olde Oneida St., Appleton, Wisconsin |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 44°15′31″N 88°24′18″W / 44.25861°N 88.40500°W |
| Area | 5 acres (2.0 ha) |
| Built | 1883-1915 |
| Architect | E.D. Jones |
| Architectural style | Romanesque and Italianate |
| NRHP reference No. | 90000639 |
| Added to NRHP | April 19, 1990 |
The Fox River Paper Company Historic District, now known as the Historic Fox River Mills, is a complex of paper mill buildings in Appleton, Wisconsin, United States, built from 1883 to 1915. The historic district includes the Romanesque-styled Ravine/Rag Mills, the Italianate-styled Lincoln Mill which originally milled flour, and the Italianate-styled Fox River Mill. The site is now used as apartments but also retains a functioning hydroelectric canal and privately owned generating station. This hydroelectric infrastructure continues a tradition of electricity from water power dating from the 1880s which makes the Lower Fox River the oldest hydroelectric generation region in the United States.