Wicklewood High Street
towermill
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1912
Wiliam Wade, his sons & Kitty the horse |
Wicklewood
towermill in the High Street was of a tarred brick type construction.
It was built 1845-46 by Richard Mann and the 5 storey mill was 43 feet high with a
ground floor diameter of 17 feet. The tower originally had two ground floor doors but the northern was was later bricked up, possibly at the time the drive from the external auxiliary engine was installed. |
The Norfolk boat shaped cap with a gallery and petticoat held a 6 bladed, left handed fantail. Underneath was the striking chain wheel and tailpole. The four double shuttered sails, which replaced the common sails the mill was built with, were 63 feet in length, being set on 52 foot stocks and drove 2 pairs of overdriven stones. One pair of stones were French burr stones and the other pair consisted of a French burr runner over a Peak bedstone. One pair of sails had 7 bays of 3 shutters and the other pair had 6 bays of 3 shutters and 1 bay of 4 shutters and were struck by rack and pinion. The 15 ft 2 ins. cast iron windshaft has a shape that suggests it quite possibly came from a postmill and the 8 ft. 3 ins. cast iron brakewheel came from Silfield towermill when its machinery was dismantled in 1911. |
A second pair of French burr stones and an oat crusher were set on the first floor and were driven by an external engine. |
Brakewheel:- Iron, solid (in two sections bolted together) |
The top section of the upright shaft is of cast iron. Previously it was all wood but one day a piece of metal dropped into the eye of one of the stones, stopping it immediately. The momentum of the sails twisted the top of the shaft to splinters. Wicklewood Mill, Harry Apling - 1982 |
1926 |
c.1930 |
Tithe map 1845 - as redrawn by Harry Apling |
Tithe Award 1845 |
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No. 117 |
Pightle |
Arable |
2a. 0r. 27p. |
15s. 11d |
White's directories of 1836 and 1845 list Richard Mann as a bricklayer and beerhouse keeper. In order to build the mill he borrowed money from John Mitchell, Edward P. Clarke, John Harman, Sophia An Jones of Wymondham and ? Pomeroy. Although the 1845 tithe award gives Richard Mann as both owner and occupier, the first miller listed was John Browning Mallett in 1846. |
All that Cottage and all that windmill situate in Wicklewood aforesaid, then or late in the possession or occupation of the said Richard Mann, with the Land, Buildings, Millstones, Irons, wheels, going gears, sail cloths, furniture, utensils, scales, apparatus, fixtures and movables of every kind and description and appurtenances whatsoever to the said Messuage, Cottage, Windmill and premises respectively belonging or held, used or enjoyed therewith respectively. Mortgage Document obtained by Richard Mann from John Harman & E. P. Clarke for £600 - Jan 1850 |
Richard Mann obtained a further mortgage for £180 in August 1850 from Harmer & Clarke and on 16th October 1861 both mortgages were transferred to widow Sophia Ann Jones of Wymondham. |
All that Messuage and Cottage in two tenaments and all that windmill situated in Wicklewood aforesaid then or then late in the several occupations of James Doughty and Henry Buck with the land, buildings, millstones, irons, wheels, going gears, sail cloths and other fixtures . . . half an acre or thereabouts . . . Excerpt from sale document - 1882 |
WICKLEWOOD near Wymondham, Norfolk |
Particulars & Conditions of Sale of a Miller & Merchant's occupation comprising TOWER WIND MILL, Granaries, Stables, Engine House, Coal Store, Piggeries and DWELLING HOUSE with large garden which WM. VINCENT & SONS are favoured with instructions to Sell by Auction at the King's Head Hotel, Wymondham on Friday, August 3rd 1906 at Four o'clock in the afternoon in one Lot. Particulars & Conditions of Sale may be obtained of the Auctioneers 11a Upper King Street, Norwich or of |
Mr. F.W. STANDLEY, |
WICKLEWOOD near Wymondham |
|
All that most substantially Brick Built TOWER WIND MILL with 5 floors and driving three pairs of Stones, (two wind and one steam), together with a good Oat Crusher (drive wind or steam), a Range of brick, stone, clay and wood-built and covered with tile, Stables, Hay house, 2 good Granaries, Cart Sheds, Clay-built and Corrugated Iron covered Engine House and Coal Store (with good Well of Water underneath) Wood Built and Corrugated Iron covered Cart Shed, Wood built and tiled Pig Styes, with yards covered with Corrugated Iron, Brick and Tiled Privies, Good Well of Water, also a Brick Built and Tiled Double Dwelling containing on the ground floor, 4 Rooms and 2 Sculleries with two Staircases, Entrance Hall, Closets, Pantries, etc., and 6 Bedrooms over, with Large Gardens, the whole containing nearlky 2r. 0p. as now occupied by Mr. W. Farrow (whose tenancy expires at Michaelmas next), at an apportioned annual rental of £30. Tenure Freehold. Note. The Garden is well stocked with fine Apple, Pear, Plum and Cherry Trees now in their prime. The House, Mill and Buildings have been well kept up and are in first class repair, a very good trade is being done at the Mill and there is a good opportunity for a pushing business-like man with small capital. Good Grist District. Nearest Mill 3 miles off. |
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Outgoings. |
Land Tax, as assessed Tithe (if any) |
The Purchaser will have to pay, in addition to the Purchase money, for the Tenant's Fixtures, which shall be taken by Valuation to be made in the usual way. A Schedule of the same will be produced at the time of Sale. |
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Sale Particulars - 1906 |
Mill working - 7th November 1938 |
William Wade bought the mill at the above sale for £330. He had previously learnt the milling trade from Samuel Mann at Wicklewood's Hackford Road mill before working at one of the three Martham windmills working at that time. He then spent time at both Cringleford and Marlingford watermills before becoming a corn chandler at Wymondham. The mill stayed with the Wade family for the rest of its working life. |
During William Wade's tenure the mill was run as a grist mill, grinding farmers' corn and delivering the meal back to them as feed - in 1933 for 1s. 6d. per coomb. |
William Wade's day book related the following prices - |
In 1937, Kelly's Directory listed William Wade & Son as millers. William had brought Dennis, one of his three sons into the business. Dennis left scool at the age of 14 and began working in the mill in 1908. His two elder brother were already working for their father. His first jobs were to sweep the mill from to to bottom and to cut chaff to feed the two horses. |
c.1980, Harry Apling reported that Mrs. Stanley Arthur Mann of Wicklewood was the granddaughter of William Vout. Her mother was Julia Vout and her siblings were Walter, Herbert and Howard. |
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1st September 1970
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1975 |
When a protest against Sunday working was made to Mr. William Wade of Wicklewood, he retorted, "If the Lord is good enough to send me wind on a Sunday, I'm going to use it." Rex Wailes & confirmed by Dennis Wade - 1971 |
Steam engine - Burrell 7 h.p. installed before his father's time. |
The mill ceased working in 1942 just before William Wade died, leaving the mill to son Dennis Wade and by the 1970s it had become derelict. |
Recently retired as manager of the Mustard Department at Carrow Works (Reckitt & Colman Products Ltd) ... in the immediate years after the last war we purchased millstones (runner and bedstones) from local mills for the purpose of milling prepared mustards. We had stones from ... Wicklewood ... ... use of large buhr stones ... Letter to Harry Apling from J. O. M. Wedderburn - 15th October 1973 |
Survey by John Lawn for the Norfolk Windmills Trust - October 1977 |
1980 |
17th May 1980 |
15th August 1981 |
1989 |
The cap was removed for renovation in 2005 and replaced again on Friday 21st July 2006 along with a new upright shaft. The Norfolk Windmills Trust said they also intended to replace the steel sails with more traditional wooden ones, with the intention of eventually recommencing milling operations. |
c.2000
|
4th July 2013 |
Wicklewood had a second towermill that stood to the west of the village on the Hackford Road. |
Mill gets its cap back after year of renovation |
After a year without it, Wicklewood Mill finally got its cap back yesterday. |
Sails return to listed Norfolk windmill |
Work to replace the sails at Wicklewood Mill began today after they were removed seven years ago. |
31st July 2014 |
O. S. Map 1882 Courtesy of NLS map images |
White's 1845: Richard Mann. bricklayer & beerhouse |
White's 1845: Richard Mann, bricklayer & beerhouse
Kelly's 1896: James Doughty, miller (wind) & farmer Kelly's 1912: William Wade, miller (wind & steam) |
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
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Nat Grid Ref TG 07640265 |
Copyright © Jonathan Neville 2004 |