Sheila is on a quest to research all
she can about every watermill in 'old Berkshire' (ie
before the county boundary changes in 1974). There
were possibly as many as 128. She illustrated her
talk with her own photographs and reproductions of
etchings, maps and drawings found in the Mills
Archive and other sources. She found the Domesday
Book a good starting point, but many towns have been
developed since 1086 and mills have 'moved' parish
or village.
She divided her lecture by the river
used by each mill, starting with the Thames, often
called Liquid History. Twenty-six of Berkshire's
mills were on the Thames, including Old Windsor's
which is Saxon, then Viking, then Norman and in use
until about 1100. The other rivers are the Loddon,
Ock, Letcombe, Pang and Kennet. Some mills are
attached to a weir, some have a leat, others were a
pumping system to take river water into, for
instance, Windsor Castle and the Town Mill at Henley
may have helped clear the sewage.
There were flour, paper, cardboard,
animal feed, textile, thimble and sawmills. Many
millers made a good income from their eel traps,
often using the eels to pay their rent. They also
grew reeds, osiers and other willows for the
thatchers and basket makers. Often the miller was
responsible for the weirs or lock gates and had to
take time to help barges and narrow boats pass
safely up and down the river.
Sadly many mills were converted to
steam or electricity or demolished and often no
trace of the mill can be found on her maps or in
situ, so Sheila will be grateful for any
identification members can do. She is appealing for
anyone with photographs of mills while they were
still working and the millers who ran them.
Kenneth C Reid and Kenneth Major have
already done research into Berkshire's mills but
Sheila plans to spend the winter in Berkshire Record
Office in Reading, checking everything she has
already found and looking for new information. The
members of the Hampshire Mills Group are looking
forward to hearing more in the future and wish
Sheila well in her research.