Windmills · South East England
Great Mill
Great Mill is a windmill in the United Kingdom.
Wikimedia Commons contributors — see linked file page for photographer and licence licence
Plan your visit
- Typical visit
- 30 min–1 h
- Nearest railway station
- Sheerness-on-Sea · 0.4 km
- Free entry
- Family-friendly
- Dog-friendly
About
Great Mill is a named windmill in the United Kingdom. OpenStreetMap heritage rating: 2/5. Coordinates: 51.4387°, 0.7626°. This entry is part of The Great Britain Guide, a free, ad-free, open-data tourist directory.
Photo gallery
Protected designations
- Site of Special Scientific Interest: Medway Estuary and Marshes SSSI
Designations sourced from Natural England open data under OGL v3.
From the Wikipedia article
Great Mill or Ride's Mill is a Grade II listed smock mill just off the High Street in Sheerness, Kent, England, that was demolished in 1924, leaving the brick base standing. It now has a new smock tower built on it as residential accommodation.
Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.
Background
History
Work on building the Great mill was started by the millwright Humphrey of Cranbrook in 1813. Owing to the nature of the ground the mill was built on it was necessary to lay deep foundations. Lack of funds meant that the mill was left as an unfinished base for a couple of years before Thomas Webb, who owned the Little Mill, bought the unfinished mill and financed its completion in 1816. A steam engine was added in 1889 as auxiliary power. The mill was worked by wind until 1905, when the sails and stage were removed. It worked by steam engine until 1918, and was demolished in 1924. The mill's brick base was left, serving as a corn store in the 1930s. In 2006, planning permission was applied…
Description
Great Mill was a four-storey smock mill on a two-storey brick base, with a Kentish-style cap carrying four patent sails. It was winded by hand, no fantail being fitted. There was a stage at second-floor level. The mill drove three pairs of millstones, and the steam engine drove a further two pairs, as well as the millstones in the windmill. The mill was 66 ft high, and the brickwork in the base is 22 in thick. The replica has a smock built on a steel frame, with a Kentish-style cap.
Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.
- Coordinates
- 51.4387, 0.7626
- County
- Kent
- District
- Swale
- Parish
- Sheerness
- Postcode
- ME12 1UA
- Parliamentary constituency
- Sittingbourne and Sheppey
- Established
- 1816
- Nearest railway station
- Sheerness-on-Sea — 0.4 km
- Official site
- www.sheppeylittletheatre.co.uk
Sources
- osm: n2898057421 (ODbL)
- wikipedia: Great Mill, Sheerness (CC BY-SA 4.0)
- commons: Sheernes mill.JPG (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Frequently asked questions
- Where is Great Mill?
- Great Mill is in Kent, South-East England, United Kingdom (postcode ME12 1UA), in the parish of Sheerness.
- When was Great Mill built?
- Built or established in 1816.
- Who owns Great Mill?
- Great Mill is owned by |built = 1816.
- Is Great Mill a protected site?
- Yes — Great Mill is part of the Medway Estuary and Marshes SSSI Site of Special Scientific Interest.
- Is Great Mill free to visit?
- Yes, Great Mill is free to enter.
- How do I get to Great Mill?
- The nearest railway station is Sheerness-on-Sea, about 0.4 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode ME12 1UA.