The mill site of the Damm-Mühle probably exists since the German settlement of Flamings in the 13th century.
The first known documentary mention is from 1660. Originally it was operated as a sawmill and grain mill with two wooden water wheels. The sawmill on the left bank of the Dahme burnt down at the beginning of the 20th century. The current mill building on the right bank of the Dahme was built in 1905. A gas engine from this time supplied until 1934, the mill and the village with the then still low electricity. The water wheel was replaced in 1919 by a Franciseschachtturbine. At the end of the sixties the mill was stopped by the Müller family Miecke.
In the course of the bridge renovation in 1995/96, the turbine was removed and built on the left bank Dahme for illustrative purposes. A Zuppinger water wheel made of steel and wood replaced them at the same place. The generator driven by it supports the electric power supply of the mill building, which was refurbished from November 1996 to March 1998 and converted into a restaurant and boarding house. The remains of the old Mühltechnik are located in the water mill Goßmar near Luckau, in. Müschen (Spreewald) and in Berlin-Marzahn.