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Newsletter 94, Autumn 2011 © Hampshire Mills Group |
Hampshire Water
Festival July 16 & 17 2011
by
Eleanor Yates.
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Carol and John manning the HMG stand |
The festival was held
at Staunton Park in north Havant again this year. This is a lovely landscaped
country park with a walled garden and farm and very popular with families, many
of whom braved the extremely changeable weather which often accompanies the
Water Festival!
Once again the
Hampshire Mills Group was in the marquee with lots of craft stalls and groups
promoting economical use of water. As soon as it started to rain the crowds
filled the tent, eating the President’s Tea Bread and the Treasurer’s Fruity
Gingerbread and buying our Longbridge Stoneground flour, cards and notelets and
looking at the pictures of mills and milling on our information boards.
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We had a site
opposite the door of the marquee and our new banner was used to good effect.
The committee would
like to thank the members who helped set up and represented us on our display
stand: Mick Edgeworth, Andy Fish, Margaret & John Silman, Tony Yoward, Jane
Yoward, Alison Stott, Peter Mobbs, John Christmas, Carol O’Shaughnessy and
Eleanor Yates. |
QUIZZICAL
CORNER
And here are the answers to the summer
brainteasers..........
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1. Photographed in Cornwall, what is the apparatus
called and can you guess what it was used for?
..Stamps. Not for licking but for bashing – or
stamping – ore to release the raw materials; in the
case of the ones in the photo, Cornish tin. The
Stamps were worked by water power in the same manner
as trip
hammers.
2. Which Hampshire company made machinery for mills
and were renowned for their turbines under “British
Empire” and “River” trademarks? ..Armfields were the
renowned Ringwood foundry manufacturers of so many
mill parts and related machinery as well as
turbines.
3. What, in milling terms, is a Spider and where
will you find one? ....A “Spider” is the term given
to the iron cross (or cranks) set at the centre of
patent windmill sails; these link the shutters to
the striking rod. |
And here are the autumn brainteasers.......... |
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1.
Do you recognise this Hampshire mill where
the wheel is gently decaying in its wheel
housing?
2.
What is the English translation of the term “meuniere”?
You will often see it on a menu i.e. Sole Meuniere.
3.
Can you complete this ancient quip? “Hair grows
in the ..…. of an honest miller.”
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