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Page 8 |
Newsletter 103, Winter 2013 © Hampshire Mills Group |
Passing through the mill……………….
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Founders of the
Traditional Cornmillers Guild, Nick & Ana
Jones
wish to retire and sell their
Little Salkeld Watermill in Cumbria,
and so are inviting us all to contribute towards a
community purchase of the mill and its thriving
business to ensure its continuation. This venture is
supported by the Eden Valley District Council and
the Plunkett Foundation. The mill provides vital
community employment and has a strong list of
outlets it supplies with organic and biodynamic
flours. Find out more from their website:
http://www.organicmill.co.uk/node/186
and follow the links.
Have you seen the tide mills video featuring a
millwright at work in
Woodbridge Tide Mill?
Beaulieu and Eling
also get a mention. See it on
http://www.eafa.org.uk/catalogue/334. From the
East Anglian Film Archive it is titled The workings of the tide mill in Woodbridge, Suffolk,
and it features the millwright
Jim Desborough,
at work.
By the time you receive this newsletter, The Tide Mill
Institute will have held it’s 9th Annual Tide
Mill Conference this time at Topsfield
Historical Society, Massachussetts, U.S.A.
Conference reports will be awaited with interest.
If you went to it, do let us have your written
impressions of it, and if you didn’t go, catch up
with all the international tide mill news at
http://www.tidemillinstitute.org/41.html.
Meanwhile, if you want to know even more about tide mills have
a look at the 33 downloadable pages of The Saga
of Tide Mills, a discourse written in
1997 and published in Renewable and Sustainable
Energy Reviews Vol.1 no.3.; find it at
www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/sustainable/refs/tide/TideMills.pdf
A
copy of the Hampshire Family Historian :
Sept.2011 was passed to me with an article on
the Aylward Family and Dunbridge Mill; it
carries photos of the family and mill house but,
sadly, not of the mill itself. Milling families
certainly got around a lot - a colleague researching
the Bracknell mills has come up with the Ailward/Aylward
family there too. Three more family names found
both in Hampshire and Berkshire are Cooper, Paice
and Tubb but hopefully more of them in another issue
of the newsletter. If you can tell me anything
about the families and the mills they worked, please
let me know.
Sheila.
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Obituary:
Jonathan
Minns.
We were all very sad
to learn that the enigmatic creator of the British
Engineerium at Brighton has died. This visionary
man did so much to engender public knowledge and
experience the historic importance of recognising
and understanding the mechanical evolution, and
principles, which shaped food and textile production
plus transport and, in particular, of steam, in a
first hand, practical way that he will long be
remembered by many. In ‘Old Glory’ magazine’s
tribute, Ian Clark, known to many HMG members for
his millwrighting skills, is quoted thus: “I
first met Jonathan in 1976 at the British
Engineerium, …and subsequently started work for him
at the museum in 1977; what followed was a lifelong
friendship. He was an intuitive engineer,
inspirational leader and old school enthusiast. He
was a one-off and will be sorely missed.”
Hellingly Mill became
his Sussex home and he set about restoring it with
customary zeal as well as being involved in many
ventures promoting interest in our industrial past
throughout the country. He died at home, the day
after his 75th birthday on October 13th
2013. We send our sincere condolences to his family.
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Hellingly Mill: an early postcard
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and sketched by Frank Gregory in 1936
(from the Frank Gregory Collection ©MAT |
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