Tivetshall
St Margaret towermill |
c.1920
|
Tivetshall St. Margaret tower windmill was a four storey mill that stood just to the north of the parish boundary and although being much closer to Tivetshall St. Mary was actually in the adjacent parish. The mill had a Norfolk boat shaped cap with a gallery, a scalloped petticoat and a 6 bladed fan. The 4 double shuttered patent sails drove three pairs of stones. Two pairs were overdriven and right handed and the third pair on a hurst frame were underdriven and left handed. The upright shaft was a graft shaft made of wood and iron. |
c.1920 |
Local farmer Fred Gibson took over the postmill in Mill Road, Tivetshall St Mary (later renamed Tinker's Lane) in 1845 and by 1851 he had moved his business to the newly built towermill around a mile away at Mill Road, Tivetshall St Margaret and it is probable that he was responsible for building the towermill. Fred Gibson's son Arthur eventually took over from his father for a short time. |
On 28th July 1973, Jack Self of Tivetshall wrote to Philip Unwin describing some of the mill machinery. |
Members of the Self family c.1920 |
Situations Vacant |
Situations Vacant |
Sketch by J.P. Chaplin c.1920 |
Tivetshall St. Mary ... a towermill, was working with a pleasant creaking of timbers ... |
c.1925 |
Mill working c.1926 |
c.1930 |
c.1935 |
It would appear that by 1933, wind power was no longer being used and all milling was carried out using an oil engine. The mill was demolished during the second world war to provide hardcore for nearby Tibenham Airfield. |
Mill working via oil engine - 10th May 1937 |
I believe at sometime there had also been a bakery run from Mill House, when I moved in in 1968 there were still the big brick ovens situated in one of the outbuildings. I was also told there was a coal yard run from the property while it was a mill but I am not sure if this is factual. |
Newspaper cutting - February 1929 |
I have just come across your Norfolk Windmills website whilst googling Mill House, Tivetshall St. Margaret. This was listed as the resisdence of an ancestor on his will. Stanley Roe's wife was my great grandfathers sister, he was William Percy Westrup mentioned in the Will. It is fascinating to read that the Roe family ran the Mill and later Jane also. All I know about Stanley Roe was the fact he commited suicide in 1929 by drowning in his mother & father in laws pond at Bush Farm, Denham, Suffolk 1929. Why I don't know. Just wondering if the Mill business was suffering at that time? Was the mill sold to the Roe family by the Self family or more passed down somehow? |
O. S. Map 1883 Courtesy of NLS map images |
Kelly's 1892: Christopher Self, farmer, Mardel farm, Tivetshall St. Mary |
c.1851: Mill built using machinery from Tivetshall St. Mary postmill on Mill Hill |
If you have any memories, anecdotes or photos please let us know and we may be able to use them to update the site. By all means telephone 07836 675369 or |
Nat Grid Ref TM16538627 |
Copyright © Jonathan Neville 2004 |