*** Welcome to piglix ***

Bocking Windmill

Bocking Churchstreet Mill
Bocking mill.jpg
The restored mill in September 2005
Origin
Mill name Bocking Churchstreet mill
Mill location TL 763 260
Coordinates 51°54′14″N 0°33′47″E / 51.904°N 0.563°E / 51.904; 0.563Coordinates: 51°54′14″N 0°33′47″E / 51.904°N 0.563°E / 51.904; 0.563
Operator(s) Friends of Bocking Windmill
Year built 1830
Information
Purpose Corn mill
Type Post mill
Roundhouse storeys Two storey roundhouse
No. of sails Four sails
Type of sails Two Spring sails and two Common sails
Windshaft Cast iron
Winding Tailpole
Auxiliary power Portable steam engine
No. of pairs of millstones Two pairs driven by wind, plus one pair driven by auxiliary power

Bocking Windmill or Bocking Churchstreet Windmill is a grade I listedPost mill at Bocking, Essex, England which has been restored.

Although a build date of 1680 is often quoted, Bocking Windmill was actually built in 1721 at a position some 170 yards (160 m) to the west (TL 761 260 51°54′14″N 0°33′40″E / 51.904°N 0.561°E / 51.904; 0.561) of its present site. The first mention of the mill was in an indenture dated 19 April 1721 where the lease of land that had been enclosed for the building of a windmill was sold to Joseph Nash, miller of Halstead for £11. The mill was marked on Warburton, Bland and Smyth's map dated c1724. The mill was conveyed to Joseph Nash Jr in April 1772, who promptly mortgaged the mill for £100. Thomas French, miller of Halstead, purchased the mill for £135 on the death of the mortgagee c1734. French sold the mill in 1774 to Bartholomew Brown, of Wethersfield for £170. In 1784 John Tabor loaned £100, with the mill as security. The mill was to be run by the Brown family for three generations, ending with John Brown who died in September 1829.

In 1830 the mill was taken down and removed from its original site "near The Bull" to its new site opposite the pub. The mill and pub were both in the occupation of John Brown the Younger. The mill at this time had one pair of French Burr stones and a flour dresser. It is thought that the mill was modernised about this time. In 1837, Brown paid £6 8s for a new sail that was 31 feet 6 inches (9.60 m) long, and a further 6s for a shutter bar, indicating that the mill had a pair of Spring sails by that time. In 1842, millwright Robert Hunt installed a new "right up shaft" (Upright Shaft) at a cost of £5. In 1850, the mill was in the occupation of William Dixon. Later millers were Henry Playle, James Hicks and Henry Hawkins. The mill was working until the First World War. the mill worked commercially until c1924 and to order for a few years after that.


...
Wikipedia

...