Cromer Windmill, Ardeley
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Cromer Windmill, restored in four stages between 1967 and 1998, is a Grade II* listed
post mill The post mill is the earliest type of European windmill. Its defining feature is that the whole body of the mill that houses the machinery is mounted on a single vertical post, around which it can be turned to bring the sails into the wind. All p ...
at
Cromer Cromer ( ) is a coastal town and civil parish on the north coast of the English county of Norfolk. It is north of Norwich, north-northeast of London and east of Sheringham on the North Sea coastline. The local government authorities are Nor ...
, Ardeley, Hertfordshire,
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.


History

The first
windmill A windmill is a structure that converts wind power into rotational energy using vanes called sails or blades, specifically to mill grain (gristmills), but the term is also extended to windpumps, wind turbines, and other applications, in some ...
in Ardeley parish was built at some time between 1192 and 1222, in which year its existence is first documented. A windmill was stated to be "in ruins" in 1374 and another is mentioned in 1576, when it was sold to William Crane, and it is believed to have remained in his family for some 200 years. No windmill is shown on John Seller's map dated 1676 or Herman Moll's map dated 1700. Despite the omission from the latter map, tree-ring counts on the Mainpost show that the tree was felled in the spring of 1679,"Dendrochronological Analysis of Timbers from Cromer Windmill Hertfordshire". - ARCUS 394 May 1998, Ian Tyers, ARCUS Dendrochronology, University of Sheffield. and a partially cut-away date on another timber reads 1681. In 1719, Matthew Crane was the miller. In 1773, John Pearman of Luffenhall inherited the mill from his uncle, John Crane. Pearman sold the mill to Thomas Pearman in 1800. In 1822 the mill passed to William Munt, who worked the mill until his death in 1837, when the mill passed to his widow Edith, who worked it until 1856 when her son David took over. A local resident reported having found the mill one morning in the 1860s "lying a shattered mass of timber across the road". Although there is no actual record of this it is supported by dendrochronology dating of the east–west crosstree to 1840–85. If this timber failed in a westerly wind the mill would indeed have fallen across the road. In 1869 David Munt sold the remains of the mill for £600 to William Boorman in 1869, who already had a
blacksmith A blacksmith is a metalsmith who creates objects primarily from wrought iron or steel, but sometimes from other metals, by forging the metal, using tools to hammer, bend, and cut (cf. tinsmith). Blacksmiths produce objects such as gates, gr ...
's business in Cromer village. Boorman did not just rebuild the mill, he modernised it by fitting single-shuttered patent sails, and it is believed that he was also responsible for the significant amount of ironwork in the machinery, and for the fantail and roundhouse.Bonwick, Luke (1999). - "Cromer Windmill History and Guide". Hertfordshire Building Preservation Trust. He died in 1877 leaving the mill to his widow Emily. She ran the mill until 1888, when her son Ebenezer took over. A steam engine was being used as auxiliary power by this time, driving a set of stones at the mill house down the hill to the village. The mill was sold to Samuel Woollatt in the 1890s, but Ebenezer continued to work it until 1898, when Joseph Ponder Scowen bought it. During this period double-shuttered sails replaced the single ones, but it is not known which miller did this. In 1914 local carpenters Clem Reed and his father replaced those sails with a set of the current unique type. When a new long stock was imported from Sweden, the journey through Buntingford was not without difficulty as the stock went through a cottage window at one point. The steam engine had been replaced by an oil engine by 1919, which worked a pair of millstones on a hurst frame outside the roundhouse. Scowen worked the mill until his death in 1920. The mill was worked by Joseph Ponder Scowen's widow Marian for a couple of years, and in 1922 Richard Hull took the mill. Hull worked the mill until 1930, apparently using the oil engine after 1923, since the fantail had blown off by 1926 and one of the sails had been blown off by July 1929. The other three sails had been taken down by 1932 and the mill became derelict. In 1938, organised by Captain Berry, a group of people who were concerned not to lose a major piece of local history re-boarded and painted the buck. Without this there would be no windmill in Hertfordshire today. During the war Ardeley Home Guard used the mill as an observation post, and cut a hole in the roof to spot enemy aircraft and parachutists. Despite this the buck survived intact otherwise, but by 1964 it was becoming dangerous and was threatened with demolition. In 1966 members of the fledgling Hertfordshire Building Preservation Trust launched an appeal, and raised £4000 to enable a first phase of restoration to take place between 1967 and 1969. The mill was given to the Trust in 1967 by the owner George Turner of
Cottered Cottered is a village and civil parish west of Buntingford and east of Baldock in the East Hertfordshire District of Hertfordshire in England. It had a population of 634 in 2001, increasing to 659 at the 2011 Census. Cottered is home to a Ja ...
,Smith, Arthur c. (1986). - "Windmills in Hertfordshire". Stevenage Museum Publications. and the Trust determined to restore it to the condition in which it last worked. J. A. Elliott Ltd of Bishops Stortford rebuilt the roofs of the mill and roundhouse and re-boarded the buck. New stocks and sail frames (not of last working type), and a new tail ladder and skeleton fantail were made by E. Hole and Sons, the Burgess Hill millwrights. Further major structural repairs constituted Phase 2 in 1979/80. These were carried out by Millwrights International Ltd, and included work to prevent infestation by Death Watch beetles. and removal of sails and brakewheel. By 1989, thanks to a report by English Heritage, funds became available for Phase 3. At this point there was an unrealised proposal to use a
helicopter A helicopter is a type of rotorcraft in which lift and thrust are supplied by horizontally spinning rotors. This allows the helicopter to take off and land vertically, to hover, and to fly forward, backward and laterally. These attributes ...
to move the mill to a new site near
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, where it could be rebuilt and put to work. In 1990, Phase 3 work carried out by Dorothea Restorations Ltd of
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included a new weather beam, rebuilding and fitting the brake wheel and making and fitting replicas of the last working sail stocks and frames. On 8 May 1991 the mill was opened to the public for the first time. Phase 4 in 1998 involved replacement of the meal beam; reconstruction of the bin floor; making and fitting of sail shutters, striking gear and stone furniture, and restoration of the internal machinery. This work was carried out by The Chiltern Partnership, funded by the
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and
English Heritage English Heritage (officially the English Heritage Trust) is a charity that manages over 400 historic monuments, buildings and places. These include prehistoric sites, medieval castles, Roman forts and country houses. The charity states that i ...
and returned the mill to virtually full working order. The mill was officially reopened on 21 June 1998 by Richard Whitmore


Description

Cromer Windmill is a post mill with a single-storey roundhouse. The trestle, entirely made of oak, is enclosed by the roundhouse. The main post is square at its lower end, and diameter at the crown tree. It is long. The crosstrees, long. are carried on four brick piers of about height. The four quarter bars are each long. The body measures by in plan, and is in height. The mill is high overall. It is winded by a fantail mounted on the ladder. The four ''Patent sails'' are of unique configuration, with one-piece shutters spanning the full width of both leading and driving sides of the sails. Each sail is long and wide, spanning . They are carried on a cast-iron ''windshaft'' which replaced an earlier wooden one. The ''windshaft'' carries a wooden clasp arm ''brake wheel'' with 72 cogs. The brake wheel drives a cast-iron ''wallower'' with 18 teeth, carried at the top of the cast iron ''upright shaft''. At the lower end, the cast iron ''great spur wheel'' with 64 wooden cogs drives the two pairs of ''underdrift millstones'' located in the breast of the mill via cast-iron ''stone nuts'' with 32 teeth. The millstones comprise: * LH Bedstone - 4 ft 3inch (1.3 m) French Burr, very worn. * RH Bedstone - 3 ft 9inch (1.14m) French Burr, ex-Runner. * In tail of buck - 4 ft 3inch (1.3.m) Derbyshire Peak Runner, near new. * Outside roundhouse - 3 ft 9inch (1.14m) Derbyshire Peak Runner, broken and repaired, ex-Draper's Mill, Margate.


Millers

*Matthew Crane 1719-74 *William Munt 1800-37 *Edith Munt 1837-56 *David Munt 1856-69 *William Alfred Boorman 1870-75 *Emily Boorman 1875-88 *Ebenezer Boorman 1888-98 *Joseph Ponder Scowen 1898-1920 *Marian Scowen 1920-22 *Richard Michael Hull 1922-30 Reference for above:-


Public access

Cromer Windmill is open 2.30pm to 5pm on Sundays, Bank Holiday Mondays and second and fourth Saturdays from mid-May until mid-September and groups at other times by appointment.


References


External links

* http://www.hertfordshirebpt.org {{Listed buildings in Hertfordshire Windmills in Hertfordshire Post mills in the United Kingdom Grinding mills in the United Kingdom Windmills completed in 1681 Grade II* listed buildings in Hertfordshire Grade II* listed windmills Museums in Hertfordshire Mill museums in England 1681 establishments in England