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High Salvington windmill

High Salvington Mill
Durrington mill.jpg
The restored mill
Origin
Mill name Durrington Mill
High Salvington Mill
Grid reference TQ 123 067
Coordinates 50°50′56″N 0°24′22″W / 50.849°N 0.406°W / 50.849; -0.406Coordinates: 50°50′56″N 0°24′22″W / 50.849°N 0.406°W / 50.849; -0.406
Year built 1750
Information
Purpose Corn mill
Type Post mill
Roundhouse storeys Single storey roundhouse
No. of sails Four
Type of sails Two Common sails, two Spring sails
Windshaft Wood, with cast iron poll end.
Winding Tailpole
No. of pairs of millstones Two pairs, arranged Head and Tail
Glynde Windpump
Origin
Mill location Originally at
Grid reference TQ 457 087
Coordinates 50°51′32″N 0°04′08″E / 50.859°N 0.069°E / 50.859; 0.069
Year built Mid nineteenth century
Information
Purpose Pumping water
Type Hollow post mill
No. of sails Four
Type of sails Boarded sails
Winding Tailpole
Type of pump Plunger

Durrington or High Salvington Windmill is a Grade II listedpost mill in High Salvington, Sussex that has been restored and is in full working order. The mill stands 320 feet (98 m) above sea level and is able to take advantage of incoming sea winds.

The earliest mention of a mill is in church records, which indicate that the miller was fined in 1615. Budgen's 1724 map showed a mill on this site. The current mill was built around 1750 and was apparently insured against fire in 1774. The windmill ground flour for the Worthing area until 1897 when it was purchased by Colonel T F Wisden. A condition of sale was that the mill had to be kept in working order. It was retired to a role of grinding animal feed until 1905. During much of the 20th century the mill was neglected although in 1907 the wooden roundhouse was replaced with a concrete structure used as a tea-room. In 1959, the mill was taken into the care of Worthing Borough Council. Messrs E Hole and Son, millwrights of Burgess Hill renovated the mill in 1961 and fitted a new pair of stocks and four new sails. In March 1976 one of the sails was broken off in a gale, and the other three removed. An inspection of the mill revealed she was not in good repair. Worthing Town Council set up a restoration project. The roundhouse was rebuilt to better replicate the original in 1990 and the restored mill began grinding again in 1991. A granary was rescued from East Grinstead was re-erected at the mill in 1994. In 1998 it was discovered that one of the stocks was split. A new stock was made from laminated larch and the sails were refitted.

In early 2008, the three councillors from Salvington Ward, Mayor Heather Mercer, Cllr Jacqui Marsh and Cllr Noel Atkins, awarded the Mill Trust a total of £3,000, from the Mayor's fund and the pilot Ward Budget Scheme, respectively. This will contribute to the refurbishment of the current gatehouse as a visitor information centre, which it is hoped will be completed by the end of 2009.

Sadly, much has been written about Durrington Mill, (now called High Salvington Mill), which has found its way into official records and publications, but for which the original research appears to be lacking. This section attempts to dispel a number of these myths.


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Wikipedia

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