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Newsletter 96, Spring 2012 © Hampshire Mills Group |
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Tail Race
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Question: What do these 3 images have in common?
Answer: Identification – and the problems caused if
a mill site is not identified correctly. Picture
1 is an old postcard titled Moon Rising
over Moulsford. Well, the only
Moulsford I can trace is in 1974 Berkshire, now
Oxfordshire, and there is no record of a mill of any
type there. Several mill experts have been unable
to identify the mill and its location. Can you?
I would love to hear from you. Pic. 2 is
of delegates inspecting
the archaeology of the 1746 Perkins Grist Mill
at Kennebunkport during the 7th
Annual Conference of the Tide Mill Institute in
November 2011. Identified and recorded, but, I hope
that all the humans have been identified too for the
sake of memory and future mill researchers. Pic.
3 is an old postcard of Papworth Mill in
Cambridgeshire, correctly identified and labelled.
Rex Wailes and Peter Dolman have endorsed this. The
image is from the Peter Dolman Collection held at
the Mills Archive Trust where a lot of memory
searching goes on in needing to identify mills and
the people in pictures, postcards and photographs
which have not been labelled. Why people? Whatever
their connections, whether family, workers or
visitors, names and dates can soon be forgotten
which leaves mysteries for those who research when
our memories have gone. So please, make sure all
your photos are labelled and dated too especially if
they are to be archived one day!
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Papworth Mill is now part of the living
accommodation of a young family and we will be
learning from them what it is like to live as a
“Windmill Family” in a future issue of the
newsletter. A Kent couple appeared recently in an
episode of Channel 4’s “Grand Designs”,
turning part of their existing brick tower windmill
linked with a renovated barn into residential
accommodation. The family owned mill had been left
derelict for years; it was decided to supply the
tower with a new cap and sails, but,
disappointingly, like the mill’s machinery, these
were to be inoperable, being there for aesthetic
reasons only. Well, it looked very nice but I did
wonder if they realised sails can get blown off in
violent winds, and in their case would more than
likely fall on the barn. The finished home looked
lovely but it sadly was not seen by the young wife
who died from cancer before it was completed.
Closer to home, Arborfield Mill in Berkshire,
now demolished but once the pride of Bank of England
paper maker Henri de Portal, has become the site of
the first fish pass on the River Loddon.
A channel for fish has
been created to help them reach their
spawning grounds upstream. The £400,000 project
bypasses weirs at Arborfield that hindered migration
and will benefit
fish including sea trout, eel and barbel.
The Loddon rises in Basingstoke and flows north
through Hampshire and Berkshire, joining the River
Thames at Wargrave. In an exchange of emails with
the Editor of The Countryman magazine, Paul Jackson,
I asked about Broughton Watermill, Skipton,
where The Countryman offices are located. He
replied: “The mill here is part of the Broughton
Hall estate, owned by the Tempest family for many
centuries. The mill and surrounding buildings were
converted into offices in 1994. There has been a
water mill on this site since the fourteenth century
but it fell out of use around 1900 when grain was no
longer grown in the locality. Sadly the wheel has
long gone (there's an ornamental one in need of some
tlc) but the culvert and former wheelhouse can still
be seen.” It’s good to know that the building is
still in use and judging by a photo on
www.broughtonhall.com/watermill it hasn’t been
altered externally.
Permissions to reproduce the above images are gratefully acknowledged
viz. the Mills Archive (Papworth Windmill) and The
Tide Mill Institute for Perkins Tide Mill excavation
(see their website
www.tidemillinstitute.org/23.html).
The postcard of Moon
Rising over Moulsford is mine.
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