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NEWSLETTER APRIL 2007
WATER MILLS ON THE UPPER COLNE
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In feudal England watermills were important franchises belonging to
the lord of the manor who owned the sole right to grind corn and levied
a toll on everybody using his mill. Each monastery also had its own mill
which served the dual purpose of controlling the sluices to the
fishponds and grinding corn.
The economic value of water-mills in the years before steam power was
harnessed, was enormous. The mills were rented out to professional
millers, and as valuable income producing assets, grand families
collected portfolios of them. The De Veres based in Castle Hedingham are
said to have had 17.
Watermills had been established on nearly all the sites mentioned in
this article by the time of the Domesday survey in 1086 and since the
technology dates back to the
Romans many of the mills may predate Domesday by centuries. Windmills
were not developed in this country until the end of the twelfth century,
by which time there would not have been any suitable sites available for
new water-mills on our stretch of the Colne. The actual mill buildings
were rebuilt with some frequency as they were of their very nature
subject to damage by flood and extremes of weather, quite apart from
their propensity to burn down.
The geography of North Essex does not lend itself to fast flowing
rivers and the Colne is both short and undramatic. Yet by the time of
Domesday there were 33 mills on the Colne and its tributaries. In what
is the driest part of the country, insufficient water must have been a
perpetual problem, especially in the upper reaches.
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This article deals only with mills on the Colne within the CSCSI
(Colne-Stour Countryside Association Sphere of Influence!) i.e. from the
source somewhere near Steeple Bumpstead to the fringes of Colchester.
In 1086 all the mills would probably have been milling grain, but
since wind and water were the only sources of power other than muscles,
the mills were adapted over the centuries to mill oil (Wakes Colne), for
fulling (Langley), for producing paper (Greenstead Green appears to be
the only one, and that is on the Bourne Brook, a tiny tributary of the
Colne) and, ultimately, for spinning and weaving (Halstead). Fulling was
the process whereby cloth was hammered to give it more body. Before
fulling it would have been possible to see through the woven cloth. Many
mills were used for both milling and fulling simultaneously.
The first surviving mill on the Colne is Alderford in Sible
Hedingham, but Domesday mentions two others higher up the river at
Yeldham and Castle Hedingham. Of Yeldham
there is now no trace and even in Domesday it is described
as “then one mill”, meaning that there had been a mill there
at the time of Edward the Confessor, but that at the time the Survey was
written it had for some reason disappeared.
A 1592 map of Castle Hedingham shows the mill just behind Memories,
the hideous restaurant which today decorates the entrance to the village
from the Halstead – Yeldham road. The mill stream, which has now been
filled in, was cut about 50 yards nearer the main road than the present
bridge over the Colne and necessitated a second bridge. The mill itself
belonged to the Benedictine nunnery which stood on the site of the
present Nunnery farm and was founded in the twelfth century by Alberic
de Vere the First Earl of Oxford; his wife Lucia becoming first
Prioress. The de Veres exacted a toll on anyone crossing the bridge. The
ford on the south side of the bridge, which can still be clearly seen,
is called Hinck Ford, and gave its name to the Hinckford Hundred which
at the time was administered by the de Veres. The only surviving remnant
of the mill is a millstone set into the road outside one of the cottages
in Nunnery Street. Otherwise both mill and nunnery have disappeared,
although, improbably, Hinckford Hundred lives on.
Nowadays the Colne in Yeldham is usually no more than a trickle and
it seems unlikely that there would be enough water for a mill at Castle
Hedingham, but by the time you get to Sible Hedingham the flow has
picked up appreciably. There you will find Alderford Mill, a lovely
example of the typical, unpretentious, white, weatherboarded, red
roofed, Essex water-mill. The present mill which was built in the 18th
century, is the last in a long line dating back to Domesday, and was
operated by the Rawlinson family right up to the 1960’s. It was bought
by Essex County Council in 1994 and they are very slowly doing it up
with the intention, eventually, of opening it to the public. At present
it is only open when the moon is blue, but it is also open on National
Mill Day which in 2006 fell on the second Sunday in September and that
is when I went.
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Alderford Mill, Sible Hedingham.
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As it was such an auspicious day, Geoffrey Wood the
County Mills Officer was there to oversee things. He is a mill-wright by profession, a mine of information on all
things to do with milling, and has responsibility for
getting the machinery back into working order. The two
main jobs still to be done are to rebuild the wheel and to
equip it with a new shaft or axle. The shaft is about 2 foot
in diameter and weighs approximately a ton. The new
one is being made from French oak – sadly English
silviculture is no longer up to the job. Give Mr Wood
another 2 or 3 years and the wheel should be turning
again. Let’s hope that the Health and Safety busybodies
will allow us to go and see it in action.
Inside the mill, whitewashed to provide as much light as possible to
reduce the need for naked lights, which in the dusty atmosphere might
have blown the whole place sky high, there were originally 5 sets of
stones. Two were
operated by the wheel and a further 3 were added when steam power was
introduced. Finally a diesel engine replaced steam and operated a number
of roller milling machines. In the 1880’s the introduction of roller
milling technology from Hungary marked the beginning of the end for the
water-mills. Although wholemeal flour continued to be made by stone
milling, a pair of stones could only produce about 1 hundredweight of
flour an hour whereas a roller milling machine could produce about 5
times that. Outside, the mill has been beautifully re-roofed and
repainted.
The intrepid can now walk a mile and a half or so down the river to
Hull’s Mill in the parish of Great Maplestead. It is a beautiful walk
and you will be amply rewarded when you get there. Hull’s Mill is the
most picturesque of all the surviving mills in the Colne Valley, thanks
to its glorious location, its fine state of preservation and its
magnificent ford. It is well known to a wider public thanks to the
watercolour by Eric Ravilious which was recently bought by the Fry
Gallery in Saffron Walden for £35,000. The footpath from Alderford Mill
takes a circuitous route which allows you to approach the mill from the
Maplestead side down the lane from Purls Hill. Dr Ronnie Green who lives
on the lane the other side of Hull’s Mill has written on it at length
as “My Favourite Lane” and it is difficult to think of a more
enchanting one in the whole of Essex.
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Hull’s Mill by Eric Ravilious.
(Courtesy of the Fry Gallery)
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Nearing the bottom of the lane it crosses the old railway,
where I am always thrilled to see the notice advising
drivers of the weight limit of 8 tons – except buses up to
101/2 tons. Ronnie Green says that to the best of his
knowledge and that of the locals no bus has attempted the
lane for the past 50 years.
Hull’s Mill is another Domesday mill and remained in
operation until 1959. It was rebuilt for the last time in
1848 and from 1917-1959 was operated by Hovis Ltd.
Both the mill and the lane were then renamed Hovis and although Hovis
had to keep up with technology and removed the wheel, which was replaced
with a turbine, they were enlightened owners and kept the exterior of
the mill in first rate condition. It has subsequently been converted
into a rather fine house. The original and very beautiful fifteenth
century mill house stands just the other side of the exceedingly narrow
road. The ford on the Hedingham side of the mill always has a reasonable
flow of water across it, and sometimes unreasonable. A measuring post
gives adventurous motorists a good idea of what their chances of
survival are.
The next mill down the river, Box Mill on the outskirts of Halstead,
is no more, and on the Hedingham side of Box Mill Lane you will find the
recently completed barrage designed to prevent flooding in Halstead. The
mill and mill house were torn down in the 1920’s, the adjacent
windmill having been blown into the river in 1882. No sign now of the
idyllic scene that decorated the front cover of our 2005 newsletter. All
you will find is a sea of nettles which envelops one of the Colne’s
most neglected stretches. Not that things were anyway always idyllic. In
1889 the miller, John Ruffle, caught his beard in the machinery and was
squashed.
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Box Mill circa 1900.
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The other mill in Halstead, now called Townsford Mill, is the place
where the Courtauld textile empire really took off, (after smaller
beginnings in Pebmarsh and Bocking). The mill, a magnificent white,
weather-boarded building (and now a star of television), sits astride
the river in the centre of Halstead, and from the outside is very much
unchanged from the middle of the nineteenth century.
There used to be constant disputes between the Town mill and Box mill
over the use of water, as when the Town mill built up its working level,
the water level at Box mill rose to the point that the efficiency of the
mill was reduced by as much as 50%. In 1825 when Samuel Courtauld bought
the Town mill, he put in a new wheel and matters ended up at the Essex
Summer Assize. The jury found unanimously in favour of Box mill, but it
was awarded damages of only one shilling which seems a trifle mean,
since Box had found itself unable to start the day’s work until the
Town mill had been operating for two or three hours and had thereby
reduced the water level. Courtauld then went over to steam and the Town
mill was adapted for silk weaving. A power loom factory was built in
1832 and by the 1890’s the business employed about 1400 people. Most
of the factory buildings were demolished following the closure of the
business in 1982, but the mill itself, one of the finest industrial
buildings in East Anglia, lives on as an antique emporium and café.
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Halstead’s Townsford Mill.
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Langley mill, the next down the river and sometimes
described as the third Halstead mill, was never in
Halstead but the relentless advance of factories along the
west bank of the river makes it look as if it soon might be.
The mill house remains, and the mill itself has also
been turned into a house in rather unsympathetic yellow
painted brick. This is a pity as the mill stream still runs
under the house and the view from the Colne Engaine
road is otherwise a very attractive one.
Just over half a mile below Langley you come to Ford Mill, also
called White’s, after the miller there for the last 50 years before it
was demolished in 1917. From the road you would never know that the
tiny, fairy-tale house (now added on to) which probably dates back to
the 16th century was once a mill house. The Environment Agency have
recently done a lot of restoration work on the mill race and reinstalled
the wheel, though not the mill building which used to house it (see
photo).
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Ford Mill – the surviving mill house.
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Further down the river in Earls Colne, the Priory used to have a mill
next to Colneford bridge on the main Colchester road. The mill which was
built by the monks in about 1100, was burnt down in the early part of
the last century, though the handsome 18th century mill house and part
of the mill pool remain. A lease in the Essex Records Office dated 1881
from John Cawardine, the owner of Colne Priory to Henry Hills, included
in addition to the mill, some stables, a brewhouse, a chaisehouse and a
cowhouse. However the miller was forbidden to keep geese or swans on the
river or mill pond. (This was in case he let them eat other people’s
grain. In medieval times, millers, who were generally thought to be
pretty unscrupulous, were limited by ordinance to three hens and a
cock). The Colneford miller was also forbidden to erect or use any steam
engine as the inhabitants of the priory might have found the noise
injurious to their well-being. This no doubt contributed to the early
demise of the mill.
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Ford Mill also called Whites. Circa 1910.
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The other mill in Earls Colne is Chalkney, well known to countless
people who kennel their dogs with Sarah Coleman. The setting is
amazingly secluded and the river and water meadows have a gloriously
old-fashioned feel about them. The mill, originally used for fulling,
was a wreck in the 1970’s, but has been most successfully restored as
a pair of cottages.
Henry Hills, mentioned above, owned Chalkney, Ford and Overshot mills
(the latter is on the Peb) and in the 1870’s attended in London the
first exhibition at which roller mills were demonstrated. He came back
and told the manager at Chalkney that “they were out of business, sure
as fate”. He wasn’t far wrong.
The introduction of roller mills coincided with the import of large
quantities of foreign wheat and sounded the death knell for the average
water mill.The introduction of steam meant that water power was no
longer necessary and before long all the business gravitated to rolling
mills situated near ports or rail-heads.
Just over a mile below Chalkney one comes to Wakes Colne – a very
different kettle of fish. The main mill building which is huge, brick
and businesslike, was rebuilt in the 19th century after the top had been
blown off the old mill in a dust explosion. It flanked a smaller oil
mill and both have now been turned into houses. The builders of the corn
mill seem to have been rather overambitious, as it was designed to
operate five sets of stones but there was never enough water for more
than three. It was impossible to fit in all five sets of stones without
taking a considerable chunk out of the miller’s house next door which
consequently had to be rebuilt. Although the oil mill (which used
principally to produce linseed oil), closed in the 1930’s, the corn
mill continued in business right up to 1974. Even after that, the Ashbys,
(who had operated the corn mill) have continued in business as coal
merchants to the present day.
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Chalkney Mill.
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Below Wakes Colne there were three more mills before West Bergholt
and the outskirts of Colchester. All three mills have disappeared
although the mill houses survive. The mill at Ford Street was demolished
in the 1920’s but the mill house can be found just over the bridge on
the opposite side of the road from the Leg of Mutton. An early 20th
century photo shows the four storied mill building astride the river
with a tall chimney beside it. A public footpath now runs alongside the
house and the former mill race (which is lovely) until one ends up in
the Mill Race Garden Centre.
Lower Mill at Fordham, also known as Hammonds is easy to miss, being
hidden at the bottom of the hill as one comes out of Fordham on the
right hand side of the road before one crosses the river. Once again the
mill itself has disappeared, although photographs show the long mill
building dwarfing the house which nowadays stands alone and looks
uncomfortably truncated.
Cook’s Mill, the last mill on our stretch of river, disappeared in
the 19th century. The site is nevertheless very much worth visiting, the
fine 18th century mill house being set in truly idyllic
surroundings. It is approached down a steep hill from Fordham Heath and
the last hundred yards or so must be completed on foot as the public
road gives out and is replaced by a footpath which runs through the
gardens of the house. It is impossible to tell where the mill buildings
were, but the setting is as romantic as any on the Colne.
Having rashly said that I would write an article on water mills on
the Colne, I soon found that I had bitten off rather more than my
readers might be expected to chew. To cover my subject adequately would
require an article at least twice as long as this. I have therefore
deliberately not dealt with the technical aspects of milling,
fascinating though they are, as they are covered in impressive detail by
the late Hervey Benham in his wonderful book “Some Essex
Water Mills”.
JEREMY HILL
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Wakes Colne Mill from the back.
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Water Mills on the Upper Colne
|| Dragonflies on the Stour
|| Lamarsh Bell Restoration
|| The CSCA Website
|| What is wrong with our Horse Chestnuts?
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