Temple Mill Island
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The island is named after the three watermills that used to be on the island for beating copper and brass. The island is now has a modern housing development on it with a marina.
Daniel Defoe referred to the mills in his A tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain (1724-1727). He referred to the "three very remarkable mills, called Temple-Mills, for making Bisham Abbey Battery-work viz. Brass Kettles and Pans &c of all sorts. And these works were attended with no small success, till in the year 1720, they made a bubble of it; and then it ran the fate of all the Bubbles at that time".[1]
See also
References
- ↑ A tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain (complete, but not proof-read), from Internet Archive, 6th edition, London: D. Browne [etc.], 1762.
Next island upstream | River Thames | Next island downstream |
Frog Mill Ait | Temple Mill Island | Gibraltar Islands |
Coordinates: 51°33′09″N 0°47′21″W / 51.5526°N 0.7892°W
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