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Knowles Mill is the remains of an eighteenth-century water-powered grain mill, located in the Wyre Forest in Worcestershire, England. The mill has been owned by the National Trust since 1938. The mill and its surroundings feature extant machinery, as well as notable populations of adders and
wood cranesbill ''Geranium sylvaticum'', the wood cranesbill or woodland geranium, is a species of hardy flowering plant in the family Geraniaceae, native to Europe and northern Turkey. The Latin specific epithet ''sylvaticum'' means "of woodland", referring ...
.


Background

Knowles Mill is a Grade II listed water-powered grain mill, located on
Dowles Brook Dowles Brook flows through the heart of the Wyre Forest, into the former civil parish of Dowles and into the River Severn. History In 1902, ornithologist and naturalist Jannion Steele Elliott purchased the Elizabethan era building Dowles ...
, in the Wyre Forest, Bewdley, Worcestershire. The forest is the UK's largest National Nature Reserve and is administered by
Forestry England Forestry England is a division of the Forestry Commission, responsible for managing and promoting publicly owned forests in England. It was formed as Forest Enterprise in 1996, before devolving to Forest Enterprise England on 31 March 2003 and ...
,
Worcestershire Wildlife Trust Worcestershire Wildlife Trust is one of 46 wildlife trusts throughout the United Kingdom. It was founded in 1968 to conserve, protect and restore the county's wildlife. The Trust owns and manages over 70 nature reserves across the county, part ...
and Natural England. However the mill, as well as the mill pond, meadow, cottage and gardens are National Trust property. The mill is approximately from the nearest parking lot. The path to the mill roughly follows Dowles Brook stream. The site also includes Knowles Mill Cottage, which is not accessible to the public. The woodland Knowles Coppice surrounds the mill to the south.


History

One of nine possible mills that historically worked on Dowles Brook, Knowles Mill was built in the eighteenth-century, and was later modified in the nineteenth-century. The surviving building is two storeys high and the site also preserves an overshot mill wheel made of iron and a great spur wheel, alongside other remnant machinery. The first record of a mill on the site dates to 1757 when it was listed as for sale in a local newspaper. However there is documentary evidence preceding 1757 that lists owners of the land that the mill was built on. These owners include Arthur Palmer, c.1661, Edward Wheeler, c.1693, Roger Hunt, c.1704, Antony Betts, c.1717, Edward Faulkner, c.1722 and Daniel Crun, c.1735. The first owner of the mill was William Crun, in 1757. It passed through a number of owners, including William and Mary Herbert, William Nicholls and Arthur Nott. The mill takes its name from the Knowles family who worked there from 1803 to the 1870s; earlier names included Coventry Mill and Upper Town Mill. The first member of the family to be listed as owner was James Knowles. The mill continued in use until 1891, when it became no longer financially viable. It was donated to the National Trust by Paul Cadbury in 1938, along with four acres of orchards. The property was visited by the historian James Lees-Milne during his work as a curator for the Trust.


Archaeology

In 2010
Birmingham Archaeology Birmingham Archaeology (formerly Birmingham University Field Archaeology Unit (BUFAU)) was the commercial arm of the Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity at the University of Birmingham. Birmingham University Field Archaeology Unit was founded ...
investigated the site and found the remains of a cast iron mill wheel, as well as "remains of the head race culvert"; other trenches investigated water flow and the mill race. Artefacts from the excavations included a 17th-century
yellowware Yellowware, or yellow ware, is a type of earthenware named after its yellow appearance given to it by the clay used for its production. Originating in the United Kingdom in the late 18th century, it was also produced in the eastern United State ...
pancheon bowl, a Sankey flowerpot, two shards of 18th-century green glass, an early 20th-century pocket-watch and a blue poison bottle inscribed "NOT TO BE TAKEN" from the wheel pit. There were 149 bottles or fragments of glass excavated from the site, representing brands such as Gartons HP Sauce, Bovril,
Kidderminster Brewery Kidderminster is a large market and historic minster town and civil parish in Worcestershire, England, south-west of Birmingham and north of Worcester. Located north of the River Stour and east of the River Severn, in the 2011 census, it had ...
, White Horse Distillers, Watville Dairies and Venos cough medicine.


Conservation

Since 1982, climatological measurements have been made at Knowles Mill and have been recorded and analysed at the University of Birmingham. The area surrounding the mill is notable for its
adder Adder may refer to: * AA-12 Adder, a Russian air-to-air missile * Adder (electronics), an electronic circuit designed to do addition * Adder Technology, a manufacturing company * Armstrong Siddeley Adder, a late 1940s British turbojet engine * ''B ...
populations, and for the presence of
wood cranesbill ''Geranium sylvaticum'', the wood cranesbill or woodland geranium, is a species of hardy flowering plant in the family Geraniaceae, native to Europe and northern Turkey. The Latin specific epithet ''sylvaticum'' means "of woodland", referring ...
.


Gallery

File:Knowles Mill 004.jpg, alt=, Knowles Mill, interior File:Knowles Mill 001.jpg, alt=, Mill mechanism File:Knowles Mill 002.jpg, alt=, Wheel-pit and waterwheel File:Footbridge by Knowles Mill - geograph.org.uk - 1034081.jpg, alt=, Footbridge at Knowles Mill


See also

*
List of National Trust properties in England This is a list of National Trust properties in England, including any stately home, historic house, castle, abbey, museum or other property in the care of the National Trust in England. Bedfordshire *Dunstable Downs *Whipsnade Tree Cathedral ...
*
List of watermills in the United Kingdom The use of water power in Britain was at its peak just before the Industrial Revolution. The need for power was great and steam power had not yet become established. It is estimated that at this time there were well in excess of ten thousand waterm ...


References

{{reflist


External links


Dowles Brook Circular Walk
(Worcestershire County Council)
Knowles Mill
(website) Grade II listed buildings in Worcestershire National Trust properties in Worcestershire Watermills in England