Former
papermill worker, Alan Mead, decided
very generously to hand over all printing
rights of his acclaimed history of the Glory
Mills at Wooburn, Buckinghamshire to the
Mills Archive Trust so that the archives
will benefit from all future sales. The
book, Days of Glory, has just had a
third print run and these bear an
inscription dedicating the proceeds to the
Archives as Alan appreciates the work
carried on there and the resources made
available. Two members of his children were
there to share in the handover. In the
photograph they flank Alan and are joined by
Ron Cookson MBE. The Glory Mills produced
specialised photosensitive paper for many
decades but was closed in October 1999 with
the loss of 250 jobs. It was just one of
more than 30 Mills sites that once worked
the little River Wye (under ten miles long)
from West Wycombe to Hedsor where it entered
into the River Thames.
At the same
time as receiving the stock of Days of
Glory, the Mills Archives Online Bookshop
also received more copies of the Watermills
of Buckinghamshire based on the research and
photographs undertaken by Stanley Freese.
This book has become a ”Bible” to everyone
involved in Buckinghamshire mill research.
The Munnings
sketch of Shiplake Mill is well known but I
don’t think anyone local knew who the artist
was – until now. Shiplake Mill was actually
two mills: the larger one produced paper and
the smaller, older one at the same site was
a flour mill. Located on the Oxfordshire
riverbank beside Shiplake Lock it was
demolished following a fire. Sheila Viner
will be carrying out a survey of the site in
late September with Head Lock Keeper, who
not only manages the site which still
contains operational sluices, but has a keen
interest in the mill’s history.
Sheila M. Viner