MILLS.
In 1086 there were two mills in Isleworth
manor. (fn. 88) In 1297 the lord of the manor owned a mill
'of Isleworth' and a mill 'of Brentford', (fn. 89) and by
1300 there was a mill at Oldford, on the Crane in
Twickenham. (fn. 90) The Brentford mill was presumably
driven by the Brent and was probably that which
was granted about 1235 with land by the Brent from
Henry de Stoke to his daughter Maud. Henry held it
of the Abbey of St. Radegund, Bradsole (Kent).
Ralph de Pyrie, perhaps Maud's son, granted it to
Edmund, Earl of Cornwall. (fn. 91) It seems to have been
still in existence in 1326. (fn. 92)
There are several references to a mill belonging to
the manor in the early 14th century, which perhaps
concern the mill 'of Isleworth'. (fn. 93) Its situation is first
indicated in 1352, when it adjoined the manor-house
and stood on a stream called the Bourne. (fn. 94) This
seems to have run through Isleworth town in the
course of the present Duke's River, and the manorhouse probably stood south of the river and west of
Church Street. (fn. 95) One chronicle includes a mill among
the buildings belonging to Richard of Cornwall
which were destroyed by the Londoners in 1264: (fn. 96)
if this is correct, it may have stood here, beside the
manor-house which the mob burned, or at Baber
Bridge, by the fishpond which they emptied. In 1370
there were two water-mills attached to Isleworth
manor, one of them in need of rebuilding; (fn. 97) just
before this the reeve had been ordered to rebuild the
water-mill of Isleworth. (fn. 98) The Bourne seems to have
had defects as a mill-stream in the 14th century, and
by 1463 the Isleworth mill was totally in decay and
disused. Later the mill-stone was sold, and before
1506 the derelict mill-house had been leased with
the adjoining manor-house to John Fox, Bishop of
Winchester, who had granted Syon Abbey another
mill in exchange. This new mill had been built between Twickenham and Isleworth by a man who had
leased the manor-house about 50 years before. (fn. 99) The
most likely, if not the only possible, place for a mill
between Twickenham and Isleworth was on the
Crane.
The Crane worked other mills in Isleworth before
this date. The Oldford mill in Twickenham has already been mentioned. The site of a former mill at
Imbury (i.e. near Baber Bridge) was conveyed to the
Crown in 1375 (fn. 1) and is perhaps to be connected with
the mill at Baber Bridge which may have been destroyed in 1264. (fn. 2) It seems that the Crane was little
more effective than the Bourne in driving a mill, for
the new mill between Isleworth and Twickenham is
not referred to again, and by 1543 yet another mill
(later known as the Isleworth Manor Mill or Kidd's
Mill) was being built at the old position near the
mouth of the Bourne, while the Bourne was reinforced by a new river specially built across Hounslow
Heath from the Colne. (fn. 3) The new mill remained an
appurtenance of Isleworth manor until 1876. (fn. 4) It had
two mill-stones in 1553, (fn. 5) and five in 1633, of which
four ground corn and the fifth ground wood for dyes.
It had only the four corn-grinding wheels in 1669,
when it was to be rebuilt by the lessee. (fn. 6) By 1845 there
were two steam-engines to assist the water-power and
the mill was said to be one of the largest for flour in
England. (fn. 7) The lessee was then Richard Kidd. After
some variations in the firm's name, Samuel Kidd &
Co. Ltd. were the owners when the mill stopped work
a little while before it was demolished in 1941. (fn. 8)
The new river which was built under Henry VIII
soon served other mills in the area. Norden described
a copper and brass mill between Isleworth and Worton, where 'many artificial devices' were in use. (fn. 9) This
mill stood on the Duke's River in St. John's Road,
and was managed by a partnership, of which one
member, John Broad, claimed to employ processes for
making copper plates which had never before been
used in England. According to the proceedings in a
dispute between the partners in 1596 the mill was
probably built between 1581 and 1587. (fn. 10) Glover's
map of 1635 describes it as a copper-mill, but it was
marked as a paper-mill in a map of 1607 (fn. 11) and may
have been the Isleworth paper-mill which was stopped with other Middlesex mills from working in
1636, because of danger from plague-infected rags. (fn. 12)
The mill never belonged to the owners of Isleworth
manor and had no inherent right to use the water of
the Duke's River; deeds survive from the later 17th
century and later by which the miller of Isleworth
Manor Mill leased the use of the water to the owners
of what was almost certainly this mill. These deeds
show that the mill was used in 1671 both to make
paper and to grind brazil wood for dyes, and by 1721
as a brazil-mill only: one of the terms of these leases
was that it should not be used as a corn-mill. (fn. 13) By
1694 the mill was generally called the Brazil Mill, (fn. 14)
a name which adhered to Brazil Mill Lane (now St.
John's Road) and to the mill itself some time after it
had in fact become a corn-mill in the 19th century. (fn. 15)
By 1862 the mill had been burned down and the site
was bought by the owners of the adjoining brewery,
who demolished the remaining buildings. (fn. 16)
Between the junction of the Duke's River and the
Crane above Baber Bridge and their divergence
below Fulwell in Twickenham a number of mills
were built at different times. The highest up the
river was the Bedfont Powder Mill, north-west of
Baber Bridge, in the parish of East Bedfont. It was in
operation as a sword-mill in 1635, (fn. 17) and was converted to gunpowder during the Interregnum. (fn. 18) It
stood on the Duke's River just above its confluence
with the Crane. A paper-mill was built above Baber
Bridge just below the junction of the rivers about
1620. (fn. 19) It was still working in 1636 but had apparently gone by 1675. (fn. 20) Below Baber Bridge on the
Crane Ogilby marked a sword-mill in 1675, and the
sword manufactory is said to have moved here from
the Bedfont Mill further up after that had been converted to gunpowder-making. (fn. 21) In 1687, however, it
was reliably said that the owners of the Bedfont Mill
above the bridge had received a joint lease about 21
years before from the Earl of Northumberland, the
owner of the river, and Francis Phillips, the owner of
the land, and had thereupon built a second powdermill on the Feltham bank below the bridge. (fn. 22) A
powder-mill on the south of Baber Bridge, but this
time said to be in Isleworth manor and parish, was
to be pulled down and replaced by a brazil-wood mill
under a lease of 1752. (fn. 23) The brazil-mill was working
in 1756 and 1784, but in 1810 it was leased as a flaxmill. (fn. 24) In or before 1834 it was again converted, this
time to make snuff, and between 1865 and 1894
became a cartridge factory. (fn. 25) This last change may
have been made in 1871 when the Duke of Northumberland sold it to Messrs. Curtis & Harvey, who also
worked and bought from him at the same time the
Bedfont and Hounslow Gunpowder Mills. (fn. 26) This
last, with another mill at Fulwell, stood on the Crane
in Twickenham parish. (fn. 27)
On the Duke's River after its separation from the
Crane two calico-printing mills were set up quite
near to the Brazil Mill but over two centuries leatr.
The first seems to have been started about 1769, and
stood on the east bank of the river just north of
Worton Bridge. It was leased from the Duke of
Northumberland. (fn. 28) The other, which did not belong
to the duke, stood on the west bank a little farther
upstream. It was in existence by 1818. (fn. 29) Both had
been discontinued by 1833. (fn. 30)
Heston, with no streams of any size except for the
Crane on its western boundary, seems to have had
no mills in the Middle Ages. Sir Thomas Gresham,
however, built corn-, oil-, and paper-mills which were
worked by the stream running through Osterley
Park: (fn. 31) the mill pond was the farthest east of the
several ponds on this stream, and lay between Windmill Lane and the Brent. (fn. 32) The mills were probably
all in one building: in 1584 the corn-mill was said to
have been set up on the Brent about twelve or thirteen years before and the paper-mill to have been
added to the same building about seven years later. (fn. 33)
All were 'decayed' by 1593, except for the corn-mill,
which does not seem to have survived much longer. (fn. 34)
In 1818 there was a mill on the Brent just above
Brentford Bridge. (fn. 35) It was no longer there in 1865. (fn. 36)
A windmill belonging to Isleworth manor in 1352
and 1362 may have stood at Whitton, in Twickenham
parish, where one is known to have existed later. (fn. 37)
'The Windmill' in Heston, mentioned in 1718, (fn. 38)
seems to have been an alehouse, but after the inclosure of 1818 a real windmill was built on Hounslow
Heath north of the Staines Road, to grind corn. A
steam-engine was added in a nearby building shortly
before 1891, when all the buildings were burned.
The factory of Parke Davis & Co. Ltd. later took
over the site. (fn. 39)
The Good Intent Flour Mill was a co-operative
venture started in 1802. There is no evidence that it
flourished or even functioned as a mill, but it attained
considerable notoriety while it was being built
because its share-holders claimed to vote as freeholders in the parliamentary election of that year. (fn. 40)
It is said to have stood at the Town Wharf in Isleworth (i.e. in Swan Street), (fn. 41) but the source of its
power for grinding is unknown.