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Newsletter 144 Spring 2024 © Hampshire Mills Group |
Little Corby Mill, Warwick Bridge
Keith Andrews
Little Corby Mill at Warwick Bridge, in the Eden
Valley, which we visited last year, is a fully
operational corn mill producing flour for sale, and
offering guided visits.
There was a mill here from at least the 12th
century, but the present mill dates to a rebuild in
1839. It finally closed in 1989 when the last miller
retired. By then it had been listed grade 2* because
of its architectural merit, and particularly because
the waterwheel, machinery, and millstones were
intact, and the mill had been unaltered since
Georgian times. It avoided being demolished for
residential development in the 1990s, but gradually
deteriorated. Placed on the ‘At Risk’ register in
2000, Carlisle City Council persuaded Cultura Trust
(culturatrust.org) to take on the restoration of the
mill. With grants from the Heritage Lottery Fund and
many other sources, this £2 million project was
completed in 2019, with the Trust taking ownership
of the mill in 2015. Public support led to a
decision to set up a Community Benefit Society to
lease and run the mill as a community bakery.
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The main building is square with 3 storeys and a
slate pyramidical roof with a weather vane. The 2
storey block in front of it with a high-hipped slate
roof and louvres houses the kiln. The waterwheel
is in the building alongside, behind the arch.
The wheel is high breastshot, 10ft wide and 14ft
diameter with 32 sheet iron buckets on a 10in
diameter main shaft, and is fed by a long leat from
both Trout Beck and Cairn Beck (but not from the
adjacent River Eden). The bypass channel shown here
has a hydraulically operated sluice.
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The timbers supporting the pyramidical roof |
The kiln area is now used as a meeting room.
A jog scry (sieve), not in use |
Information from Industrial History of Cumbria,
cumbria-industries.org,
and the mill’s website
warwickbridgecornmill.org.uk.
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