Showing posts with label mill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mill. Show all posts
Monday, 11 May 2020
Bill Mills, Pontshill, near Ross on Wye
On a recent walk of several miles from home we came upon a place that perfectly illustrates the rural context of the early industrial revolution. Bill Mills, in the Castle Brook valley, is a rural site first mentioned in a document of 1362. At that time it is likely to have been a small, water-powered corn mill. From about 1638 to 1821 it was a paper mill, mainly dependent on water power, but latterly using a steam engine. Thereafter it returned to grinding corn for flour using the water wheel driven by the brook. In the second half of the nineteenth century the mill also bottled beer and mineral water with the aid of a steam engine. Flour milling and mineral water bottling continued until WW2 using a Tangye horizontal steam engine (still in situ). In the last quarter of the twentieth century the building was largely disused and derelict apart from a few dwellings acting as holiday cottages.
In recent years the whole site has been sensitively restored to incorporate ten dwellings. Its Grade II listing has ensured that care was taken to preserve features that told of its interesting past.
photos © T. Boughen Camera: Lumix FZ1000 2
Monday, 19 February 2018
The feral pigeon
The feral pigeons that we see in the towns and cities of Britain are the domesticated descendants of the rock dove (Columba livia), a wild bird that is still native to the UK. The feral versions carry the same Latin name even though in many (though not all) instances they look quite different from their wild ancestor. Today the truly wild rock doves inhabit a just a few northerly sea cliff locations. However, their descendants are everywhere. This feral pigeon, perched on a sill at the old Borough Flour Mill at Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, perhaps saw the building as an inland cliff.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
derelict,
feral pigeon,
Gloucestershire,
mill,
Tewkesbury,
window
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)