Hethersett
Mill Road postmill |
Hethersett Mill Road mill had a two storey roundhouse and used patent sails to drive one pair of 4ft and one pai of 4ft 2ins French burr stones, a flour mill and jumper.
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In 1854 the mill was recorded with the following grinding capacity: |
To be SOLD |
Notice re |
Sale of Effects of Mr. Davey, Miller, 29 January 1829 |
To Millers |
SALE PARTICULARS. W. Spelman |
SALE PARTICULARS. W. Spelman. |
Notice re |
To be Let and entered upon at lady Day next. A capital Post Windmill, with Patent Sails, two pairs of stones, flour mill, going gears, tackle and machinery complete, in substantial repair and good working order, with sack barrow, weights, scales etc. |
Hethersett |
To be Sold by Auction by Mr. S. Newson on Monday 17 March 1834 & the following day |
John Westgate of Hethersett, Norfolk, Miller |
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James Winter |
St. Giles Street, Norwich 24 February 1837 Norfolk Chronicle - 25th February 1837 |
John Westgate, deceased, formerly of the hamlet of Lakenham, miller, and late of Hethersett, in the county of Norfolk, miller and farmer. Bankrupt |
Tithe map 1846 - as redrawn by Harry Apling |
Tithe Award 1847 |
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No. 236 |
House, Yards, Windmill etc. |
Pasture |
0a. 3r. 18p. |
4/7d |
Hethersett. To be let |
Preliminary Notice of Sale |
Messrs. Butcher are favoured with directions from R. W. Blake Esq. to sell by Auction at the Swan Hotel, Norwich on Saturday 12 June 1858 at 3 o’c in seven lots the undermentioned desirable estates viz. |
Messrs. Butcher will sell by Auction at the Swan Hotel, Norwich on Saturday August 28, 1858 at 3 for 4 o’c in lots, viz. |
HETHERSETT |
Lathan Mobbs (26) Miller, was charged with stealing a purse containing £8 7s, the property of Wm. Wright, at Heathersett ....the prisoner had been three weeks in the employ of Mrs Rachel Rant, the prosecutor's daughter, as a journeyman miller, and slept on the premises. The prosecutor, an elderly man, had the sum of £8 7s in his pocket on Monday the 17 th of June, and on going to bed, he put , as usual, his trousers under his pillow. The gold consisted of five sovereigns and six half sovereigns. The next day he went with his daughter to Norwich to hear a cases he had at the county court, and they also visited the horse riders, and returned home at five o'clock. About nine or ten o'clock, for the first time in the day, he put his hand in his pocket and found that his purse was gone. He gave the prisoner in charge the next morning (Wednesday). The prisoner told the policeman that he believed his master had been robbed at the horse riders and he showed him £8 in gold - five sovereigns and six half sovereigns – tied up in a canvass bag, which he stated he had saved out of his wages. His wages were only 6s a week and evidence was given that a day or two before the robbery he had spoken of his want of money, and that on leaving his former situation at Pulham, three or four weeks previously, he had tried to get some money to enable him to get to Heathersett, to take his place at Mrs Lant's. The canvass in which the money found on the prisoner was wrapped up was shown to be part of some sacking belonging to the mill; the purse lost by the prosecutor was found on a pit on the premises. Mr Bulwer argued for the defence that there was not the least evidence that the prisoner had ever had an opportunity to rob the prosecutor who in all probability had his pocket picked by a Norwich practitioner. A miller from Suffolk, with whom the prisoner had been apprenticed gave him a good character, but it appeared that he had not seen much of him for the last seven years. Th chairman in summing up, observed that the finding of the purse in the pit on the premises upset the theory of the prosecutor having been robbed in Norwich. The possession of so much money by the prisoner after having been known in want of money, and the circumstances that the money coincided exactly in the number of coins with what had been lost by the prosecutor, were certainly very suspicious facts, but the question was whether they left any reasonable doubt on the minds of the jury as to the prisoner's guilt. Verdict not guilty Mobbs was then tried on the charge of feloniously embezzling the sum of 11s 8d, the property of his master Wm. Field, miller at Pulham St Mary Magdalen. The prisoner had been six years in Mr Field's employment, and occasionally received money for him. After the prisoner left his employ a few weeks ago, the prosecutor sent a Mr Stanley a bill for 11s 8d for five stone of flour bought on March 15 th, and he then found that Mr Stanley had paid the money at the time to the prisoner, who delivered the flour. The defence was that the prisoner had paid the money to the prosecutor, who had omitted to mark it off in his book, and had consequently forgotten receiving it. Mr Bulwer urged the probability of such a mistake, and the prisoner’s honesty during six years' service, as strong presumptions against the likelihood of his embezzling a paltry sum of 11s 8d. The prisoner was acquitted by the jury. |
Rachel Rant was the daughter of William Wright. Reading the above report and consulting the timeline below, it would appear that William Wright was the husband of Rachel Wright and that he was living in the same house as his daughter and family in 1861. Interestingly, he did not show up in the census return of 1861, so presumably he was elsewhere on the date of the census. |
HETHERSETT |
HETHERSETT |
HETHERSETT |
Rachel Lant appears to be the widow of John Timothy Lant (m.1858 Sep Qtr; d.12 Mar 1861 Hethersett) having been previously m. 849 Jun Qtr to Frederick Crane; William Lant senior I believe to be her father whose name should be Wright, while William Lant was born a Crane. John Lant (deceased) would appear to be the son of Joseph Lant miller in Tibenham in 1851, and he, or his father also Joseph, is mentioned in your pages under Forncett. Rachel doesn't seem to have married again as the Rachel Lant d. 1924 Nov Qtr age 92 is probably her. |
Bryant's map 1826: Windmill
1863: T. Drane, miller, bankrupt |
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Nat Grid Ref TG14820473 | Copyright © Jonathan Neville 2007 |