Here are your Sizzling
Summer
Brainteasers
Q1. Can you name the Hampshire watermill in
this charming scene?
Q2
A mill was chosen to grace the cover the calendar of
a nationwide society. Can you name the mill, its
location and the society
Q3 What
silken textile derives its name from the silk moth’s
name?
Q4 Mr. Whitney, an American inventor,
revolutionised a textile cleaning process. What was
the machine – and what did it do?
Answers will be given at the Summer
meeting and in the Autumn Newsletter
Here are the
Answers
to the
Spring
Brainteasers
1. Q. This retired
windmill is in the Home Counties, north of
Hampshire. Do you know where?
A. The Old Mill, Old
Guildford Road, Frimley Green, Camberley GU16 6PD
O.S.REF: SU896563
The round tower to
the left of this picture was built as a tower mill
in 1784 for grinding cereals. By the early 20th
century it was no longer in use. Its cap was
converted to a roof and it was incorporated into a
mock-Tudor house in 1914.
2. Q. A familiar
high street firm of opticians, with branches
throughout England, has an ancestral link with silk
mills. Any idea who?
A. Mr John Dolland
of Dolland & Aitchison is the milling connection.
Son of a Huguenot silk-weaver in Spitalfields, where
he was born. He followed his father's trade, but on
gaining education in Latin, Greek, mathematics,
physics, anatomy amongst other subjects he abandoned
silk-weaving and joined his eldest son, Peter
Dollond (1730–1820), making optical instruments in
1750. Published an "Account of some experiments
concerning the different refrangibility of light"
(1758). In 1761 he was appointed Optician to the
King; his name is especially associated with
development of achromatic lenses by the combination
of crown and flint glasses, which reduces chromatic
aberration (colour defects).
3. Q In 1900, a
Hampshire Mill was the first to be recorded as
converted from steam driven roller milling to stone
milling. Do you know which one it was?
A. Abbey Mill,
Bishops Waltham. Sadly now a development site for a
Sainsbury Supermarket.
4. Q. There have
been four editors so far of the HMG Newsletter; Pam
Moore was the first, can you name the other three?
A. Mary Yoward, Ros
Plunkett and Sheila Viner.
5. Q. Can you make
the connection between Hollins Mill, Marple,
Cheshire and a book entitled “Weeping In the Isles”?
A. This large cotton
mill hit the news headlines with a scandal involving
deaths of three young ladies taken from the Isle of
Skye to work in Hollins Cotton Mill. The full story
was told in the book written by Minister for Sleat,
on the Isle of Skye, in 1852. The story appeared in
David Mitchell’s edition of BBC’s television
programme, “Who Do You Think You Are? (Still
available to watch on iplayer
6. Q Where in
Hampshire was Captain Harcourt Brown’s ‘Patent
Parchment Factory’?
A. Rivermead Mill,
Romsey. Captain Harcourt Brown bought the mill
c.1856 and set about producing parchment from pulped
bullock hides. Parchment is a thin material made
from hide, often calfskin, sheepskin or goatskin.
However, Captain Harcourt Brown, like several paper
millers before him, was not successful and Rivermead
Mill changed hands again a few years later.
Answers sourced
from: 1. English Heritage . 2. Wikipedia. 3. The
Mills & Millers of Hampshire Vol.2. 4.
Hampshire Mills Group Newsletters. 5. Romsey Mills &
Waterways. SMV