Peter began by talking about TIMS – The
International Molinological Society – which was
formed in 1967; every four years a symposium is
held and excursions take place in other years giving
a chance to visit mills in a wide variety of
countries. Peter showed us many slides to accompany
this talk.
Having learned to cultivate cereal crops, grain was
initially ground by human power. Later this was
superseded by animal power and in turn by waterpower
around 85BC.
Another 600 years were to pass before wind-power was
harnessed in Persia, and it was to be some 500 years
later still that the conventional windmill we
recognise today was to appear.
The earliest design had a centre post sunk into the
ground, around which the body pivoted; problems of
rot and the difficulty of excavating the hard ground
led to the development of the open trestle post mill
(five remain in England). The upright post was
usually supported on four quarter bars but there
were variations such as doubling-up the number of
quarter bars and crosstrees. In time the trestle
was encased in timber or brickwork, thus overcoming
the lack of storage space and providing shelter from
the elements. The roundhouse also enabled the mill
to be built higher; sometimes the trestle itself
was mounted on brick pillars thereby gaining even
more height and storage space.
It is vital for efficient working of a windmill to
be able to keep it turned into the wind, so how was
this done?
A tail-pole enabled the mill to be pushed round by
hand; sometimes this tail-pole was braced,
particularly on the continent. Peter had an
example of a tiny mill in Portugal where, with the
crosstrees pivoted beneath the mill the whole was
turned using old millstones as wheels on a crude
stone track around the mill, pushed around with a
crowbar!