Though steeped
in history, Eling is not averse to change
and, since it reopened in 1980 after nearly
40 years of decay, has been kept running by
a succession of dedicated local volunteers.
This week, an advertisement for a new,
full-time miller (24 hours a week, no
experience required) made national news,
with applicants from all over the country
bidding to keep the ancient tradition
alive.
The man in charge of training the new
recruit is David Plunkett, 70, Eling’s chief
miller, who has worked here on a voluntary
basis for almost 40 years. Plunkett, who
greets me with oily workman’s hands and a
set of creased white overalls, has agreed to
show me the ropes and put me to the test as
Eling’s first female miller.
“This has always been my escape from work,
even though it has been more physically
onerous than anything else I’ve done,” he
explains. “It is a huge privilege to do this
job because it is so rare and the
surroundings are wonderful. I’ve trained up
nearly every miller they’ve had here since
1975. It’s a great line of work but it’s not
easy.”
David, who has been a stonemason and clerk
of works at Windsor Castle, knows this place
like his home. He can spot a bad grain of
wheat with a glance; pick out a poorly oiled
wheel from its creak. He was, he says, drawn
by the building’s history.
Though no one knows when Eling was built, it
was mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086,
and later owned by King John, who sold it to
the Bishop of Winchester in the 1200s. The
bishop entrusted it to a college he was
building, now the public school Winchester,
which owned the mill (and leased it out)
until the middle of the last century.
Today the mill is run by the local council,
who will pay the new recruit around £16,000
a year.
Its longevity illustrates just how vital
tide mills once were throughout Europe and
America, before the invention of the steam
engine led to their gradual decline.
As well as milling flour, they were used for
sawing wood, operating the bellows and
hammers of ironworks, making cotton and
grinding spices and gunpowder. Before it
fell into disuse, Eling produced animal
feed……..
One or two of the facts are not completely
correct and are subject to artistic licence
by the author - Sarah Rainey