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Newsletter 117, Summer 2017 © Hampshire Mills Group |
Dorset Flax and Hemp Industry
Ruth Andrews |
When Keith and I go on holiday we
always seem to find something interesting. This
time we visited Dorset. We stayed near Burton
Bradstock and were thus well-placed to explore
Bridport and West Bay. (No, we didn’t
go to photograph the Broadchurch locations, although
a lot of people seemed to be doing so!) We had
taken Peter Stanier’s Dorset in the Age of Steam
published in 2002 and we bought a copy of
English Heritage’s Bridport and West Bay – The
buildings of the flax and hemp industry, which
was published in 2006. This article is based on
information from these two books and our own photos.
From the 17th century hemp
(for ropes) and flax (for twine, netting, and
sailcloth) was grown in the Bridport area. It was
harvested by hand and threshed to remove the seeds
before being left in the fields to ‘dew-ripen’ in
order to release the long tough fibres. In later
centuries the process was called ‘retting’ and the
plants were stacked in tanks or ponds to allow their
soft parts to rot away. The process of separating
the raw fibres was called ‘swingling’ or ‘scutching’;
they could also be crushed with water-powered tilt
hammers or edge runners, a process described as
‘balling’ or ‘bolling’. The fibres were further
cleaned by ‘heckling’ or ‘combing’ to draw out the
fibres and remove short broken tow, at first by hand
but later by machinery. They were then spun into
yarn by hand in a walk, and then further twisted
together to make a rope or twine. Bridport has a
lot of open rope walks which, although no longer in
use, are fossilised in the layout of the gardens and
back alleys of the town.
As time passed, the industry became
more mechanised, and purpose-built mills sprang up
around the town and beyond. Even today, it is a
major centre for the manufacture of all sorts of
nets.
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Richard Roberts transformed Burton
Bradstock’s cottage industry by building the
country’s first flax swingling and balling mill in
1803. It was originally called Grove Mill but since
being converted to residential use it has become
Burton Bradstock Mill.
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Grove Mill was sold in 1840 and
became a corn mill. Its water wheel was replaced by
a 15hp Armfield turbine in 1946. The penstock of
the water wheel is still visible. This turbine
(right) displayed outside the newer Grove Mill also
built by Richard Roberts as a balling mill appears
to be French, but we couldn’t find any further
details.
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Mangerton Mill (left), north of
Bridport, originally had two water wheels which
drove a corn mill and a flax mill. Originally
breastshot, they were later rolled out and reversed
to become overshot. The flax mill became a saw
mill, and its wheel was replaced by a turbine. The
corn mill has been restored and is sometimes open to
the public. When we visited it was closed, so we
were unable to enquire whether the two metal edged
stones displayed outside (below) were used in the
balling mill.
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A self-contained industrial village
north of Bridport at Pymore was built in the mid-19th
century by Gundrys, one of the major owners of mills
and rope walks in Bridport. In addition to a steam
powered flax mill, the site also contained
warehouses, stables, a dyeing room, a rope walk, a
manager’s house, workers cottages, and a small
school. The site supplied flax twine to other
manufacturers in the Bridport area, and therefore
had especially large warehouses (left). Most
of the mills have been demolished but when the site
was being redeveloped in the early 21st
century, HMG’s Heavy Gang was invited to assist with
the rescue of a large triple sluice gate (below
left). We were pleased to see that the sluice
pinions were still there as a garden feature (below
right).
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The early 19th
century flax warehouse (above) which I photographed
then has been converted to flats with ground floor
garaging. The whole area has been sympathetically
converted to a residential village, with a lot of
new houses, but the watercourses have been retained
as a feature.
Stephen Whetham & Sons’
Priory Mills (below left) was the first
purpose-built steam-powered mill in Bridport.
Dating from 1838, it has a lot of similarities with
other textile mills. The tall arched window on the
right was the beam engine room. Balling, heckling,
carding, drawing, spinning, and also cabling,
twisting, and polishing was carried out here.
In contrast, North Mills
(below right) was an early 19th century water- and
steam-powered twine, netting, and sailcloth works
established by William Hounsell & Co. The prominent
stone warehouse survives amongst more modern twine
walks and net weaving sheds.
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These include the largest
surviving covered rope walk in Bridport (above),
which unfortunately has now been subdivided. The
shorter rope walk pictured below gives some
impression of what it might have looked like.
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Many of the cottages
fronting Bridport’s main streets were occupied by
twine spinners or net makers, employed as outworkers
by the larger factories. This photo is of South
Street.
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West
Bay developed as Bridport’s harbour, and was
instrumental in the growth of the hemp and flax
industry in the area. The earliest and largest
warehouse named Good’s Yard (after its owners, the
Good family) was certainly in existence in 1787 and
used to store flax, hemp, iron, and wine. It is now
a vintage and antiques emporium.
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An original wooden
crane and hoist survive. Does anyone know how the
‘hooks’ on the hoist wheel were used? |
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