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The Great Britain Guide

Museums · South West England

Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum

♿ Wheelchair: limited

Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum — a other in england-south-west, United Kingdom.

Main entrance, Coldharbour Mill - geograph.org.uk - 4821678

Roger Cornfoot — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1.5 h–3 h
Best time of year
Year-round
  • Family-friendly
  • Limited wheelchair access

About

Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum is a other in england-south-west, United Kingdom, listed in the Wikipedia register of British heritage and tourism sites. See the linked Wikipedia article for full details.

Photo gallery

Place summary

Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum is located in South-West England. This museum showcases the history and processes of wool production, housed in a former textile mill. It serves as an educational centre illustrating traditional methods and machinery used in the wool industry.

AI-generated from the structured facts on this page (operator, designation, listing, era). Not a substitute for visiting.

Background

History

It appears that there has been a mill of some description near the Coldharbour site since Saxon times. The Domesday Book recording two mills in the Uffculme area. At its peak the company employed approximately 5,000 people and owned and operated nine mills and factories in Somerset, Devon, and Oxfordshire. One of the most notable satellite mills was that of William Bliss & Sons, built in 1872 after a disastrous fire in the original mill. Located in Chipping Norton, the William Bliss site was one of the grandest mills in England, complete with reading room, chapel and workers cottages. Fox Brothers bought it in 1920. , Chipping Norton]] The main Tonedale site in Wellington was the largest…

Architecture

English Heritage wrote a Historic Buildings Report (B/065/2001) about the mill complex, and described the site as "probably one of the best-preserved textile mill complexes in the country. It retains the full range of buildings and power system features which characterised the development of the 19th century textile mill with much of the machinery that was used at the site in the 20th century." Coldharbour Mill was primarily always used for the production of wool yarn for the weaving frames of the Wellington mill. The original grist mill was probably a three-storey building, and the original sale notice of 1788 states "The Stream divides in two Parts, one at each End of the House, and they…

Description

The ancestors of the mill owners, the Fox family (no relation to George Fox, founder of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers) and the Were family, were early Quaker converts. During George Fox's first visit to Devonshire in 1655, he went to the house of Nicholas Tripe and his wife, who became 'convinced'. Their daughter, Anstice, married George Croker of Plymouth, and they were much persecuted for their beliefs. Their daughter Tabitha married Francis Fox of St. Germans, Cornwall, a serge maker. The family remained in Cornwall, becoming merchants and shipping agents, and in 1745 the grandson of Francis and Tabitha, Edward Fox of Eggeshall near Wadebridge, married Anne Were, the…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
50.9016, -3.3353
County
Devon
District
Mid Devon
Parish
Uffculme
Postcode
EX15 3EZ
Parliamentary constituency
Tiverton and Minehead

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum?
Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum is in South West England, in the United Kingdom — coordinates 50.9016°, -3.3353°.
Is Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum wheelchair accessible?
Partially — OpenStreetMap notes limited wheelchair access at Coldharbour Mill Working Wool Museum. Check ahead for specific facilities.