Gibraltar Mill, Great Bardfield Explained

Great Bardfield Mill
Name Of Mill:Gibraltar Mill
Operator:Private
Built:c1704
Purpose:Corn mill
Type:Tower mill
Storeys:Three storeys
Sail Number:Four sails
Sail Type:Double Patent sails
Windshaft:Cast iron
Winding:Fantail
Fantail Blades:Eight blades
Pairs Of Millstones:Two pairs

Gibraltar Mill is a grade II listed Tower mill at Great Bardfield, Essex, England which has been converted to residential use.

History

The first date at which a windmill is definitely known to have been standing here is 1707. A date of 1680 is given by some sources, but no mill was marked on Ogilby and Morgan's map of 1678. It cannot be proved or disproved that a mill was standing here in 1680. The most likely date of erection of Gibraltar Mill is 1704. A possible scenario being an earlier mill having been blown down in the Great Storm of 1703 and the present mill replacing it. By 1754, the mill had been converted to a cottage. The mill was put back to work as a windmill by 1806, when it was insured for £300, having only been insured for £50 in 1800. The mill was worked in conjunction with the nearby Great Bardfield Watermill at various times. A new cast iron windshaft was fitted in 1877, replacing the former wooden one. It was cast by Christy and Norris, millwrights of Chelmsford and fitted by Sillitoe and Brewer, millwrights of Long Melford, Suffolk. In January 1899, the sails were blown off and the cap severely damaged when the mill was tailwinded. The mill stood capless until 1904, when a new cap and sails were fitted, and a fantail added to replace the former internal winch winding system. The mill was working until 1930 It was threatened with demolition in 1938, but Essex County Council used their powers under the Town and Country Planning Act, 1932 to prevent demolition. After the death of the last miller in the late 1950s it was stripped of machinery and house converted.[1] One of the sails was damaged in the Great Storm of 1987.[2]

Description

Gibraltar Mill is an underpowered three-storey tower mill with a boat-shaped cap. The mill has four double Patent sails carried on a cast-iron windshaft and is winded by an eight-bladed fantail. The tower is 3feet to 4feet thick at base level. It is 32feet high, 20feet diameter at base level and 13feet diameter at curb level. The mill is 44feet high overall. The windshaft carries a wooden Brake Wheel with 90 iron teeth, cast in six segments. The Wallower was an iron mortice gear, with 44 wooden cogs. It was carried on a cast-iron Upright Shaft. The Great Spur Wheel had 88 cogs, and drove two pairs of millstones via Stone Nuts with 18 cogs each.[1]

Millers

References for above:-[1]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Farries, Kenneth. 1984. Essex Windmills, Millers and Millwrights - Volume Three - A Review by Parishes, A-E. 24–27. Charles Skilton. Edinburgh. 0-284-98642-9.
  2. Book: Farries, Kenneth. 1988. Essex Windmills, Millers and Millwrights - Volume Five - A Review by Parishes, S-Z. 119. Charles Skilton. Edinburgh. 0-284-98821-9.