Ros and I attended the Mills Research Group
Conference on the weekend of 8th & 9th October, near
Sudbury in Suffolk. My role in this conference was
as chairman of this small UK wide group of mill
researchers. In fact, I am one of the founder
members. We hold an annual conference at a
different venue yearly and this year it was based at
The River Stour Trust premises in the village of
Great Cornard, just south of Sudbury. A very
fitting spot alongside the old Stour Navigation with
the nearest water mill , Baker’s Mill, (now a recent
re-development by Barrett Homes and sited about 150
yards down the road).
Our venue was a classroom sized hall with first
floor offices within a modern timber framed and clad
structure with all facilities built in. All raised
and founded on multiple concrete piles, to escape
possible flooding. This suited our purposes very
well though parking was at a premium on the
restricted site, next to a large modern housing
development.
Conference highlights in the order of presentation:
-
Guy Blythman with ‘English
Windmills – Regional Variations - Part 2’. The
latest account of his research into the history and
technology of surviving English windmills.
An interesting paper by Dr Alan Crocker with ‘A
Miller's Probate Inventory of 1739’. Milling
research from a different perspective.
The afternoon session commenced with our Secretary,
Philip Graves, with family connections on the island
of Mallorca, giving an account of his research of
‘The Flour Windmills of Mallorca’. A serious study
of some of the previous 800 flour windmills on this
Mediterranean island which is about the size of
Suffolk. Illustrated with many early black & white
photographs, maps and post cards views.
Chairman David Plunkett with ‘An
Overview of the Minchinton and Goodchild
Collections.’ Illustrated extracts from the two
archives held at the Mills Archive Trust, in the
names of Walter Minchinton and Michael Goodchild who
specialised in Tide Mills research over the past
forty years.
Glynis Crocker with a talk on, ‘An unpublished paper
on fulling mills, by the late Mike Davies-Shiel’.
This included the Cumbria use of potash from bracken
burning kilns for use in processing of local wool
cloth.
Finally, Peter Filby with ‘Post and Smock Windmills
of Norfolk’ illustrated with many historic
photographs, from this specialist in drainage
mills..
Overnight accommodation was left to our own needs
but Ros and I had pre-booked a village pub (George
and Dragon Inn) with enhanced B&B reviews, in the
village of Long Melford. A spacious and convenient,
ensuite room, well suited to our needs for
two nights.