Oare Windmill

Oare Windmill

The house converted mill
Origin
Grid reference TR 009 625
Coordinates 51°19′35″N 0°52′57″E / 51.32639°N 0.88250°E / 51.32639; 0.88250Coordinates: 51°19′35″N 0°52′57″E / 51.32639°N 0.88250°E / 51.32639; 0.88250
Year built Late eighteenth or early nineteenth century
Information
Purpose Corn mill
Type Tower mill
Storeys Five storeys
No. of sails Four
Type of sails Patent sails
Windshaft Cast iron
Winding Fantail
No. of pairs of millstones Four pairs

Oare Mill is a Grade II* listed[1] house converted Tower mill in Oare, Kent, England that was built in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century.

History

Oare mill was built in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century. It was marked on the 1819-42 Ordnance Survey map and Greenwood's map of 1821. The mill was working until June 1919. There was a steam engine, the boiler of which once exploded and damaged the Mill Cottages and Windmill Inn.[2] Photographs show that the cap was still on the mill in 1952, but the roof had gone by 1963. In that year the derelict mill was converted into a house, retaining some machinery. A new domed polygonal roof fitted to replace the original cap.[3]

Description

Oare Mill is a five-storey tower mill with a stage at first-floor level. It formerly had four single patent sails carried on a cast-iron windshaft,[4] and a Kentish-style cap.[2] The cap was the largest on any mill in Kent, measuring 17 feet (5.18 m) by 14 feet (4.27 m) in plan and 9 feet 9 inches (2.97 m) high.[3] The mill was winded by a fantail. It drove four pairs of millstones[2] overdrift.[3] The wallower remains, mounted at the top of the Upright Shaft, which is wooden and 18 inches (460 mm) square. The Great Spur Wheel also remains.[3]

Millers

References for above:-[2][3][5]

See also

References

  1. "OARE WINDMILL, OARE ROAD (east side), FAVERSHAM, SWALE, KENT". English Heritage. Retrieved 2008-04-18.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Coles Finch, William (1933). Watermills and Windmills. London: C W Daniel Company. pp. 253–54.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 West, Jenny (1973). The Windmills of Kent. London: Charles Skilton Ltd. pp. 61–62. ISBN 0-284-98534-1.
  4. Photo dated 1940 by D W Muggeridge in the care of the Mills Archive Trust shows the windshaft to be cast iron
  5. "Directory of Kent Mill People". The Mills Archive Trust. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved 2008-04-18.
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