The original sawmill at Mill Creek operated from about 1790 until 1839. It was originally built by Robert Campbell to supply lumber to the
Straits of Mackinac, especially the frontier settlement of
Mackinac Island. In 1793 it contracted with
Fort Mackinac to make repairs on the soldiers' barracks. The Mill Creek sawmill enjoyed a dominant market share of the supply of cut timbers in the Straits of Mackinac during the fur trade era, and a
millwright's house was built about 1820 near the sawmill to provide a place for the mill operator to live. In 1819,
Michael Dousman purchased the mill site and continued to operate it. However, global demand for beaver fur declined in the 1830s, and following Dousman's death in 1854 the sawmill and millwright's house were abandoned. After the sawmill's abandonment in 1839, the original sawmill complex buildings rotted and disappeared. However, timbers cut by the original mill survived in buildings on Mackinac Island (
Mission Church and
Mission House, built in the 1820s and still there today). Saw marks on these timbers could be used to reconstruct the mill machinery so as to closely resemble the original. The marks gave restoration experts information on the rake of the saw's teeth and the saw's operating speed. The wood is fed into the blade at per stroke, and the infeed motion is powered by the pitman arm that powers the saw's vertical movement. Archaeological investigations were conducted at the site of the sawmill in the 1970s. The dig site was variously called the "Filbert Site," the "Mill Creek Site", or the "Campbell Farm Site", and was designated 20CN8. In September 2025, the site was renamed once again to Dousman's Mill in honor of the operator of the mill from 1819 to 1839. ==Dousman's Mill today==