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Newsletter 145 Summer 2024 © Hampshire Mills Group |
The
fun of book publication and my latest
– Windmills of my Mind
Ashok Vaidya
Photos courtesy of Bob Paterson and Simon Hudson
I never know what I am going to get when I volunteer
to prepare a book for publishing. This activity was
started one lunchtime in a Romsey pub, back in 2010,
when our HMG Christmas meeting was discussing how we
could make the tremendous archival collection of
Tony and Mary Yoward more accessible to the public.
Maybe rashly I put my hand up to say that if members
provided me with the text and images, I would lay
them out as an attractive book and get it printed.
Everyone liked the idea – take all the watermills in
Hampshire, visit them, take recent photos and gain
an update on the their current condition, and
combine this with the historical records we had to
make a combined reference/guide book.
Over the next three years we worked intensively to
collect the information and many members of the
group became involved. On my part I faced a
challenge – I was competent at using Microsoft Word
but at a simple level, and these books needed text
boxes, indexes, lists of references, tables of
content and figures and lots more, all new to me –
but this was a challenge and with lots of searching
on the web I taught myself how to do all these.
Equally daunting were the state of some of the
images, and here I did the same and learned how to
use Photoshop to clean up old images, and get the
colour, brightness and contrast right for printing.
The Mills and Millers of Hampshire – volumes 1, 2,
and 3 duly appeared and we
sold them on the website. Job done I thought.
But it was just the beginning as the Mills Archive
needed a similar process for its third research
publication – Traditional Milling Technology in the
English Cement Industry 1796-1899 by Edwin Trout.
It seemed natural to volunteer to do this and it
started a programme of about 2 publications a year
for the Archive and I am now up to 20 books.
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Which brings me to the latest project, which was not
for the Mills Archive, but for a lifelong windmill
lover, Bob Paterson. He is well known in windmill
circles even nicknamed Windmill Bob by legendary
radio DJ Bob Harris with whom he worked on his radio
shows.
This is an autobiographical book, a history of his
hobby from early childhood, through to the start of
his career in the music business in the 1990s. It
concludes with a chronological account of his
part-time work as a millwright's assistant from
March 2021, and in true muso style, a Top 10 of
Windmills!
What amazed me was how early on and enduring his
interest has been. To quote from the book:
One day I was taken to Outwood Common for a walk and
the sight of the post mill excited me somewhat and I
started waving my hands around in the air. This
must have been 1974, I was aged two going on three.
Mum thought my interest started on a summer holiday
in East Wittering in West Sussex around the same
time.
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Now all children have passions which last a few
months until the next great thing, but in Bob’s case
it endured and grew into a lifelong interest. The
key factor which made this possible was the
dedication of his parents – Mum in particular – to
support him, by taking him on trips all around the
country to look at windmills and remains of
windmills. And this developed into longer planned
expeditions to different counties to visit as many
windmills as could be found and in many cases with
repeat visits years later.
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Bob with his first windmill book, Christmas 1976
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As Bob writes:
Wherever my parents thought there was a windmill, I
would be taken there. It was unusual for them and
they were interested to go to places they probably
hadn’t been to before. The first windmill books I
was given were Windmills by Suzanne Beedell for
Christmas 1976 and R J Brown's excellent Windmills
of England.
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From about age 10 Bob started to keep diaries of his
windmill visits and these have been a great
foundation for the descriptions he gives of the
trips – the details of the journey, where they
stayed, what they saw, what they learned. All
things you would become hazy about, but the diary
retriggers the memory and allows Bob to give a
direct and interesting account of what they did.
In the book he deftly combines tales of the visits
with information about the various mills visited,
their history and current state, with photos (178,
mostly in colour) taken at the time. Again a
flavour of the writing:
I enjoyed all these day trips – of course – but I
was always looking forward to our next longer
stretch and the focus in April 1984 was our next
‘big trip’, this time to Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire,
and back home via Lincolnshire. Mum was back in the
driving seat.
Skidby tower mill is the only restored windmill in
East Yorkshire and visiting her for the first time
was one of the highlights of the trip, even though
at the time she was only sporting two of her four
sails. Built in 1821 to replace an earlier post
mill, the mill worked right up to 1966. She is now
owned by the local council who have maintained and
returned her to working order.
Over the next hundred pages he describes the nearly
thirty trips undertaken over the next twenty years
before he became involved in the restoration and
preservation of windmills, when he helped the work
on Wicken Windmill. (I had the pleasure of
preparing Dave Pearce’s book on its restoration for
the Mills Archive as Research Publication 15 in
2022). As Bob describes:
Work-ins at Wicken in the early 1990s were great
fun. I never confessed to being particularly
skilled in millwrighting, but I was (and still am)
pretty deft with the paint brush. Work-ins lasted a
week and I attended most between 1991 and 1994. I
became a member of the Suffolk Mills Group in 1991
and I am now their treasurer!
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With his family at Wicken Windmill in July 2021
Simon Hudson |
I
could go on with more details and excerpts but I
think this gives the flavour of this interesting and
involving book.
To buy a copy at £25 + P&P e-mail Bob directly on
windmillbob@hotmail.com
and he will send
you details of how this can be done.
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