Birmingham was, for geographical reasons, no
more than adequately endowed with industrial
power before the introduction of the steam-engine. (fn. 2)
In their upper courses the local streams were swift
and the construction of pools easy, and during dry
weather water continued to flow from springs in the
sandstone ridge in Birmingham and Edgbaston and
from glacial gravels covering the clay especially in
the Moseley area. In the lower valleys of the Rea
and the Cole, however, which were broad and the
gradient less steep, mill leats had to be long to
provide a sufficient head of water. The number of
mills which could be built was therefore limited,
and the control and supply of water was a constant
source of disputes between millers. Difficulties were
caused by the rapid run-off after rain from the clays
of the Rea valley, which until recent years caused
widespread flooding, though in the valleys patches
of boggy ground such as the Long Moor above
Deritend tended to impede the flow of water to the
mills below in dry weather.
The development of industrial milling in the
Birmingham area was therefore comparatively late
and consequent on developments in south Staffordshire. The rise in the number of corn mills, from
four in the Domesday Survey to eighteen in the later
Middle Ages, marked only the development of
agriculture there. The two medieval fulling mills
were in the Tame valley in the north of the area.
During the 16th century the agricultural population
continued to increase and an industrial population
began to appear. The number of corn mills rose to
22, and new fulling mills, two in Aston and Nechells
and those of the King family on the Bourn Brook,
made fulling for a time a distinct local industry.
In the 16th century, too, the exhaustion of local
fuel supplies in Staffordshire resulted in furnaces
and forges and hammer mills being driven both
further north, and southwards towards Birmingham
along the Tame valley where timber and power were
available. Blade mills, which were used in the
grinding of edge tools, swords, and cutlery began to
appear both as new erections on the tributaries of
the Tame from the early 16th, and as conversions
from corn and fulling, and this process continued in
the 17th century. By then the area was beginning to
change from a primarily agricultural to a primarily
industrial one, where resources were intensively
developed. The numbers of fulling mills declined
and other types of mill began to appear throughout
the area. Blade mills increased, the number mentioned during the civil war period and its aftermath
being significant.
The period from the late 17th to the late 18th
centuries was the great one of water-milling in the
Birmingham area, and water power made possible
the metal-using industries on which the town's
prosperity was based. There were some fourteen
blade mills and eight rolling, slitting, and boring
mills in the area at that time.
Slitting mills, which had a great impact on the
nail industry, had been introduced into the Midlands in the early 17th century and were widely used
in Staffordshire at the end of the century. It seems
likely that the large number of corn and blade mills
and forges in the Tame valley checked the early
introduction of slitting mills into the Birmingham
area, for there is no evidence of any there until the
early 18th century. When they did come they displaced old corn and blade mills and their advent
coincided with the decay locally of domestic nail
manufacture after 1680.
Paper milling made its appearance in the area in
the 17th century and in the later 18th and early 19th
century was carried on at four watermills and at
least one windmill. The pressure on the use of water
rights was thus considerable. There were in all some
48 watermills working on the Birmingham rivers in
the early 18th century. The demand for sites led to
a continued decline in the number of corn mills and
to the virtual disappearance of fulling mills. The
tributaries of the Tame were most intensively
utilized, there being four mills on the Hol Brook,
four on the Hawthorn Brook and seven on the
Hockley Brook, while the mills on the lower and
middle Rea were increasingly used for industrial
purposes, and for the first time manufacturers were
forced by the demand to look further east to the
Cole. All the known windmills in the area were
built in this period to supplement the resources of
the streams, and the development of the steam
engine was directly connected with the limitations
of water power.
The advent of steam power in the late 18th
century coincided with the demise of the blade mills
but led to no immediate decline in water-milling in
general.
The use of mills for rolling metal into sheets
began to displace grinding in the early 18th century.
Rollers were used not only for sheet iron but for
gold, silver, and brass as well, and other mills
turned over to the production of wire, buttons, pen
steel, and thimbles. In the 19th century the rolling
mill with the stamp and press was of great importance in the development of the Birmingham trades.
During the war periods of the 18th and early 19th
centuries a number of mills were used by gunmakers
for boring and grinding. Thus while some of the
mills on the overworked and uneconomical streams
of the Hol and the Hawthorn brooks disappeared,
to the south and east, on the upper Rea and the
Cole, new watermills were built and some converted to industrial uses. There were still some 45
watermills, sixteen of them corn mills, working in
the Birmingham area in the first half of the 19th
century.
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries
many mills in central areas, where the competition
of steam power had been strongest and where site
values were high, disappeared entirely, the sites
often being occupied by buildings of quite a
different nature. In the suburban areas many of the
mills which had earlier been converted to light
industrial uses developed into factories on the same
or neighbouring sites. Corn mills, which declined
only slowly in the face of steam power, survived in
the then rural areas until the coming of petrol
engines and electricity, and a few of their disused
buildings still stand in out-of-the-way places.

RIVERS
Mills on the Tame
OLD FORGE, or Hurstford Mill in Sandwell or
Forge Lane is outside the boundary of modern
Birmingham. It was a corn mill in the possessions
of Sandwell Priory (West Bromwich), which held
two mills in the 13th century. (fn. 3) It was held in the
16th century by the Wyrleys of Hamstead and
associated with the manor of Handsworth. (fn. 4) It
became an iron mill after the Dissolution, (fn. 5) and was
the property of the Whorwood family in the early
17th century. (fn. 6)
HAMSTEAD MILL with its pool lies to the
south of the Tame above the bridge on the Old
Walsall Road. It may have been the mill in Handsworth mentioned in Domesday Book. (fn. 7) A mill in
Handsworth was the subject of a dispute between
Thomas of Hamstead and Thomas le Mouner of
Handsworth in 1293; Thomas of Hamstead had
inherited this mill from his grandfather. (fn. 8) The mill
was held by the Wyrleys in the 16th century when
it was probably the manorial corn mill of Handsworth. (fn. 9) Thomas Bell was miller in 1766, (fn. 10) and the
mill and pool are shown in their present position in
1794. (fn. 11) James Swain was miller in 1818, and it
remained a corn mill in the 19th century. (fn. 12) Henry
Andrews was miller in 1908, (fn. 13) and Frank Andrews
was still milling flour by water power there in
1920. (fn. 14) The buildings may afterwards have become
part of Hamstead Mill Farm.
PERRY MILL stood in the elbow of the Tame
near the site of the present Greyhound Racing
Track. It may have been the mill of Perry mentioned in Domesday Book. (fn. 15) In 1576 half of Perry
Mill was granted by John Ward of Birmingham to
Thomas Wyrley; (fn. 16) in 1591 it was referred to as a
corn mill; (fn. 17) and in 1602 Thomas Smith was miller
there. (fn. 18) In 1632 John Curtler of Walsall leased half
the mill from Humphrey Wyrley and entered into
an agreement to carry grain only between Perry
Mill, Walsall, and the mills at Wednesbury which
Curtler held at the time. (fn. 19) The restriction was
probably imposed to safeguard the business of
Hamstead Mill. The mill fell into disuse in or before
1650 when William Spencer of Handsworth leased
for 25 years the site of half the mill, agreeing to
build neither a corn mill nor a paper mill there.
The second restriction was probably imposed to
prevent competition with a paper mill which was
said in 1648 to have been 'lately made by Humphrey
Wyrley'. (fn. 20) The mill was standing in 1794. (fn. 21)
Charles Gallimore may have been miller in 1818, (fn. 22)
Saul Elwell was miller from 1834 to 1843 (fn. 23) and John
Wilcox in 1851. (fn. 24) The mill may have been in use in
1873 (fn. 25) but was apparently not in 1887. (fn. 26) The
buildings were demolished in the 1890s to make
way for a model farm. (fn. 27)
HOLFORD MILL stood at the end of a long
mill-pool in the bend of the Tame above Witton.
In 1358 John Botetourt gave permission to Roger
of Wyrley to make sluices for a fulling mill at
Holford. (fn. 28) By 1591 it was a hammer mill (fn. 29) and was
later referred to as an iron mill or hammer mill. (fn. 30)
By 1654, when it was leased to William Edwards of
Deritend and John Crooley of Birmingham,
grinders, it was a blade mill formerly 'a furnace or
ironworks in the occupation of Thomas Foley'.
Edwards and Crooley were not to convert it from
a blade mill to any other use. (fn. 31) John Dalloway, who
was tenant in 1784, was a member of a local family
of edge-tool makers and grinders who were operating blade mills in Edgbaston at that time. (fn. 32) It was
said to be occupied about 1810 by Messrs. Woolley
& Co. of Birmingham, grinders. (fn. 33) Thomas Wilmore,
who occupied the mill in 1815, was a 'manufacturer
of rolled, plated, gilding and dipping metal, wires
etc.' (fn. 34) Thomas Clowes was the tenant in 1839, (fn. 35)
and James Turner, gunbarrel manufacturer, in
1855. (fn. 36) The Turners were still in possession in
1863, (fn. 37) but by 1875 the premises had been acquired
by the National Arms and Ammunition Co. (fn. 38) A
large ammunition factory has since been built on
the site by various companies, and is now part of
Imperial Chemical Industries, Ltd. (fn. 39) The mill, a
two-storied brick building, was used as an office
and store in 1954 and the wheel had been removed. (fn. 40)
STANTON'S MILL. A mill called a 'newlyerected ironwork upon or near the Tame', was in 1734 and 1736 in the possession of Thomas and
Joseph Stanton. (fn. 41) This may be the slitting mill,
marked a few years before on the Tame just below
Holford Mill, (fn. 42) which was called an 'ironworker
mill' or a slitting mill in 1729 when in the tenure of
John Machin. (fn. 43) It had disappeared by 1759. (fn. 44)
ASTON MILL with its pool lay on a southern
branch of the Tame north-east of Aston Church.
It was probably the mill in Aston mentioned in
Domesday Book. (fn. 45) The mill is mentioned in the
late 13th and early 14th centuries, (fn. 46) and again in
the 16th century. (fn. 47) Simon Othen was miller in
1574 (fn. 48) and William Stirrop in 1614. (fn. 49) It was mentioned with the manor in 1656. (fn. 50) Between 1718 and
1720 Daniel Saunders was the tenant. (fn. 51) At this time
the mill was paying more than twice the tithe owed
by the neighbouring mills in Castle Bromwich,
Deritend, and Bordesley. (fn. 52) In 1762 it was leased for
21 years to Thomas Hooper. (fn. 53) The building marked
as 'George Bicknell's' on the canal map of 1791
may be Aston Mill. (fn. 54) Between 1818 and 1828-9 it
was held by James Collins. (fn. 55) In 1833 the premises
were said to be both owned and occupied by the
Birmingham Waterworks Company. (fn. 56) From 1845
to 1860 Thomas James was the tenant of the
company at the mill, which was still a water corn
mill, (fn. 57) but by 1887 the mill had disappeared and
there was a pumping station on the site. (fn. 58)
BROMFORD MILL and ERDINGTON FULLING MILL. Bromford Mill with its pool stood to
the north of the Tame about half a mile below its
confluence with the Rea. It was probably the
Erdington mill mentioned in Domesday Book. (fn. 59) In
1258 the lords of part of Erdington were to repair
a mill in Erdington, (fn. 60) and in 1285 a stagnum de
Bramford was mentioned; (fn. 61) Bromford Mill was so
called in the 13th century. (fn. 62) The mill was mentioned in the court rolls of Erdington in 1333 (fn. 63) and
in the manorial accounts from 1415-16 onwards. (fn. 64)
The account of 1455-6 has attached to it a separate
account of the expenses incurred in repairing the
corn mill at Bromford, the skilled work being done
by a John Wheelwright of Lichfield; a new cogwheel was made, the water wheel repaired, buckets
and boards added and a floodgate replaced. There
was also a fulling mill called a Walkmyln (fn. 65) possibly
situated at Forge Meadow (fn. 66) on the Plants Brook.
Bromford Mill was again repaired in 1479-80 and a
new mill stone was purchased; the fulling mill was
then in a state of complete disrepair. (fn. 67) Both Bromford Mill from the 13th century onwards, and the
fulling mill from the 15th century onwards, appear
to have been held jointly by the lords of Erdington
and Pype Hall. (fn. 68) Both mills existed in the 16th and
early 17th centuries; (fn. 69) William Lane (Alane) was
for a time miller of Bromford Mill in the 16th
century. (fn. 70)
Bromford Mill was first mentioned as a forge in
1605. (fn. 71) During the first half of the 17th century it
was held by the Jennens family and may have been
worked in connexion with Aston Furnace. (fn. 72) It was
called Bromford Mill or Hammer Mill in 1683. (fn. 73)
In 1746-7 it was leased to two members of the Stour
Partnership, Abraham Spooner of Birmingham,
merchant, and Edward Knight of Wolverley
(Worcs.), ironmaster, who worked it in conjunction
with Nechells Park Mill and Aston Furnace. (fn. 74) The
Spooner family was still associated with it in 1800
and the early 19th century. (fn. 75) About 1816 machinery
was introduced to press nails. (fn. 76) In 1828-9 the mill
was occupied by John Bailey & Co., paper makers, (fn. 77)
and in 1833 and 1845 Abel Rollason was tenant. (fn. 78)
In the 1850s the Rollasons were said to be metal
rollers, but they shared the mill with a firm of wire
drawers and they themselves had turned to this
trade by 1875. (fn. 79) The site was still occupied by the
Rollason Wire Co. in 1956. (fn. 80)
CASTLE BROMWICH MILL. Of the various mills in the Castle Bromwich district mentioned
from the 13th to the 18th centuries (fn. 81) one at least
was probably the manorial corn mill of Castle
Bromwich, the site of which is in modern Birmingham. The mill of Bromwich was mentioned frequently in 13th and 14th century deeds. (fn. 82) The
site of the mill was a short distance above Castle
Bromwich bridge near the eastern end of Birmingham racecourse. (fn. 83) It was shown as a corn mill in
1887 (fn. 84) and was still working in 1895. (fn. 85)
Mills on the Northern Tributaries of the Tame
MILLS ON THE HOL BROOK. There was a
bloom smith, named Henry Grove, in Handsworth
in 1543. (fn. 86) Towards the end of 1544 the same man,
described as 'late of Perry Barr, iron branner', was
employed by William Wyrley of Handsworth to
work for a year in the latter's iron mill or 'branne'
smithy in Perry Barr, known as Perry Smithy,
which was afterwards burnt down by Grove's
negligence. (fn. 87) In 1597 Humphrey Wyrley of Great
Barr possessed the moiety of a smithy or furnace
in Perry Barr. (fn. 88) This mill may be the iron mill at
Perry Barr, owned by Wyrley and Robert Stamford,
which later in the same year was among others
attacked by a gang from Wednesbury. The tenant
was then William Whorwood. The 'iron forge' of
Thomas Parkes at Handsworth was also involved in
the same series of attacks as was his 'furnace for
melting and casting of iron', apparently at Perry
Barr. (fn. 89) In 1599 William Hopkins of Birmingham
was 'fyner of the forge' and in 1602 John Lapwicke
was described as the 'filler of Pury furnace' and
Blasius Vyntam (probably a Dutch refugee) as 'fyner
of Purye Forge'. Blithe Dickinson was mentioned in
connexion with the forge in 1613. (fn. 90) It is not clear
whether forge and furnace are one and the same.
Four blade mills in Hamstead, Perry Barr, and
Oscott were mentioned about 1560, (fn. 91) and there was
a blade mill called the Garrett blade mill in the
district in 1597. (fn. 92) This mill was working in 1614. (fn. 93)
It was probably situated at Garrett's Moor near the
head of the valley. (fn. 94) Another may be the blade mill
on the Hol Brook (Perry Stream or Barr Brook)
above Perry Bridge which was occupied by Thomas
Foley in 1654 (fn. 95) and by Samuel Porter in 1691. (fn. 96) A
paper mill, 'lately made by Humphrey Wyrley', was
mentioned in the district in 1648, (fn. 97) and in 1680
Samuel Jerrom the elder leased two paper mills on
Perry Wood Brook from Sir John Wyrley. (fn. 98) There
were four mills in Perry Barr in 1733. (fn. 99) A map of
1794 shows three mills on the Hol Brook, (fn. 1) presumably including the two blade mills formerly
held by Samuel Harvey and acquired in 1788 by
James Woolley and Thomas Archer. (fn. 2) A mill was
described in a dispute of 1794 to 1802 as near the
Tame but driven by a watercourse from Barr
Brook, and as having formerly been a blade mill,
then a paper mill and at that time a mill for boring
and grinding gun-barrels. The mill was owned by
John Gough, George Birch was the tenant, and his
sub-tenants had been William Bayliss (1773-81) and
Thomas Archer (c. 1781-92). (fn. 3) By 1814 this mill had
been converted into a wire mill, (fn. 4) but it may have
been held by John Benson, paper dealer, in 1818, (fn. 5)
for by 1839 it was a paper mill owned by Joseph
Webster and occupied by William Brindley. (fn. 6) There
were two other millers in the district in 1818. (fn. 7) In
1843 there were four mills on the brook: Webster's
paper mill; a corn mill 200 yards above it owned by
John Gough; a wire mill half a mile higher owned
by Wyrley Birch and occupied by William Bedson;
and a rolling mill 250 yards above that, also owned
by Wyrley Birch. (fn. 8) The four mills were still in
existence in 1863 (fn. 9) but seem to have disappeared
shortly after and none is shown in the 1880s. (fn. 10)
MILLS ON THE HAWTHORN BROOK. There was a mill in Witton and Erdington, probably
on the Hawthorn Brook, in 1317. (fn. 11) In 1338-9 Giles
de Erdington granted to Sir Roger Hillary a piece
of waste called Coldfeld and rights to the water of
the Hawthorn Brook, to build a mill. (fn. 12) This mill
was probably that mentioned in 1486 and 1494-5
and may have been the later Over Mill. (fn. 13) In 1509-10
William Lane, called in 1518 a bladesmith, leased a
watermill in Erdington to Richard Stich. (fn. 14) In 1533
John Bond leased to John Lane, bladesmith, water
rights for a mill (fn. 15) and John Lane probably built the
Nether Mill shortly before or after this. In 1541-2
Vincent Eagles was given water rights over the
Hawthorn Brook from John Lane's Over Mill (then
called Fitter's Mill) saving the rights of John's
Nether Mill in Witton, to a mill of which he was
then the tenant called Dwarf holes Mill. (fn. 16) In 1550
Henry Lane was the occupant of the Nether Mill
and John Fitter of the Over Mill. (fn. 17) The Over Mill
was held by the Fitter family until the end of the
century, and then by Edward and John Kynnersley
until the lease was sold to William Booth. (fn. 18) It was
first called a blade mill at the death of Edward Lane
in 1582. The Nether Mill was occupied by members
of a younger branch of the Lane family, Henry,
John and Lawrence, bladesmiths, until 1622 when
the lease was acquired by John Goodyer or Gooderd.
It was then called a blade, corn, or iron mill. (fn. 19)
William Booth became owner of both mills, then
blade mills called Fitter's and Lane's Mills, in
1620. (fn. 20) The Nether Mill was leased to Aquilla
Banks in 1652 and 1664 (fn. 21) and to Richard Banks in
1684. (fn. 22) The tenant of Dwarfholes Mill in 1652 was
Edward Mascall of Birmingham, cutler. (fn. 23) By 1729
another mill had been built on the Hawthorn Brook.
There were then three blade mills, the Over and
Nether in the tenure of John Woodcock, and
another in the tenure of John Bennett. In the 1730s
Woodcock's Nether Mill was held by Richard Goode,
and two other blade mills by William Jordain.
Jordain's mills were said to have been formerly
called Upper or New Mill and Brown's Mill. (fn. 24) It
seems likely that Brown's Mill was the former
Fitter's or Over Mill. Probably the Upper or New
Mill was Bennett's mill. By 1759 the three mills,
then shown as Swadkins, Brooke's and Ashford's
were probably the old Upper, Over, and Nether
Mills. (fn. 25) Dwarfholes Mill, which in 1680 had been
described as a paper mill, formerly a blade mill, (fn. 26)
had disappeared, its site probably being marked in
1760 by the 'Paper Mill Bank' just below Ashford's
Mill. (fn. 27) In all probability it was the mill described in
1734 as Sir Lister Holte's Ragg Mill, then in the
possession of Peter Clark. (fn. 28) The Nether Mill was
rebuilt towards the end of the century, and in 1800,
when held by James Mills, a metal roller, it was
described as Goode's Mill or 'the lower or lowermost mill'. (fn. 29) In 1833 it was a rolling mill, (fn. 30) but the
following year it was called Witton Forge. (fn. 31) By 1833
the Over Mill had disappeared, but Upper Witton
Mill was then held by William Chapman; its pool
was called Leather Mill Pool. (fn. 32) All the mills had
disappeared by 1887. (fn. 33)
MILLS ON THE PLANTS BROOK. A stretch
of the Plants Brook, the medieval Ebroc, borders
on the park of Pype Hayes House and it is possible
that one of the mills mentioned in connexion with
this estate was on the brook between Penns Mill and
the Plants Brook Forge, the sites of which are in
modern Sutton Coldfield. (fn. 34) In the 13th and 14th
centuries there was also a mill, probably on the
Plants Brook, attached to the manor of Berwood in
Curdworth, now Berwood Hall Farm in modern
Birmingham. (fn. 35)
Mills on the Southern Tributaries of the Tame (fn. 36)
CALVES CROFT MILL. Before the middle of the
19th century a stream, rising between Soho House
and Handsworth, ran east to join the Tame near
Aston Church, and was connected with pools called
the Staffordshire and Dove House pools. The
Calves Croft mill stood on this stream west of Aston
Park. It may have been the blade mill which Ralph
Forrest of Deritend, scythesmith, (fn. 37) devised to his
son-in-law Richard Dolphin in 1548. (fn. 38) In 1578
Richard Norton of Witton and John Cockersall
granted to Edward Holte of Duddeston a close called
Cavels in Aston Manor and a house or mill there
'now in the tenure or occupation of Raffe Forreste'. (fn. 39)
There was a mill in 'Calves Croft' in 1758 with a
'water engine' close to the mill pool. (fn. 40) James Watt
the younger was the occupier of the mill in 1833 (fn. 41)
and in 1845. (fn. 42) The mill was not marked in 1887. (fn. 43)
PIG MILL with its pool was on the Hockley
Brook near the boundary between Handsworth and
Smethwick. It was probably 'Mr. Lane's old corn
mill and new blade mill' mentioned in the boundaries of Handsworth in 1659. (fn. 44) It was shown as
Pig Mill in 1722-5 and 1752. (fn. 45) By 1767 it was known
as Pig Mill Forge. (fn. 46) At the end of the 18th century
it was owned by Abraham Spooner and in the
tenure of Samuel Harvey of Birmingham, sword
cutler. When Harvey went bankrupt the lease was
assigned in 1790 to John Hurd, a Birmingham
merchant, (fn. 47) who was still in occupation in 1794. (fn. 48)
John Broomfield was tenant in 1818, (fn. 49) and this may
have been the mill occupied as a slitting mill by
Wright and Jesson in the early 19th century. (fn. 50) Both
forge and pool were shown in 1831-2, but only a
pool in 1834. (fn. 51)
SOHO MANUFACTORY stood on the Hockley
Brook where it is crossed by Factory Road. In 1757
Edward Ruston and John Eaves, toymakers, of
Birmingham, leased from John Wyrley a site with
liberty to cut a leat to a mill pool constructed there, (fn. 52)
and they built a small house and a mill for rolling
metals. (fn. 53) In 1761-2 the property was acquired by
Matthew Boulton, who first demolished the mill and
rebuilt it. Even then he found the buildings unsatisfactory, and in 1764 he laid the foundations of
the factory which was to become famous. Boulton
was constantly in search of more power for his
manufacturing projects. He installed a second water
wheel, then a horse mill, and finally began to
experiment with steam engines, at first only to
pump water back into the mill pool to keep the
water wheels working. (fn. 54) A large water wheel was
still in use in 1818 and was driving a number of
different tools, (fn. 55) but it probably became disused
shortly after. (fn. 56) The Soho mill pool lay immediately
south of Soho Road in the area of Ashwin Road,
and the mill also used a stream from the Shell Pool
in Soho House grounds. Downstream from the
factory was the Great Hockley Pool, the site of
which is occupied by railway yards, and the Little
Hockley Pool, which was in the area of Hockley
Station. (fn. 57) The Little Hockley Pool disappeared
after 1834 and the Soho Pool when the factory came
to an end after the death of the younger James Watt
in 1848. It was demolished in 1862-3. The Great
Hockley Pool then became known as the Soho Pool
until it was drained in 1869. (fn. 58)
ASTON FURNACE stood above the point
where Porchester Street crosses the Hockley Brook
and is joined from the north by Furnace Lane.
There is no evidence that milling by water power
was done there, the water being used to work the
bellows for the furnace. (fn. 59) The furnace is first mentioned in 1615 when William Cowper (or Cooper)
was associated with it. (fn. 60) Later in the 17th century
the Jennens family worked the furnace in connexion with Bromford Forge. (fn. 61) Richard Vaughton
was the tenant in 1721. (fn. 62) The furnace was leased in
1746-7, together with Bromford Forge and the site
of the slitting mill in Nechells Park, (fn. 63) to Abraham
Spooner and Edward Knight. (fn. 64) Spooner and Knight
renewed their lease of the furnace in 1768. (fn. 65) A
Newcomen engine was installed to operate the
bellows, (fn. 66) but the furnace was blown out in 1783. (fn. 67)
In the early 19th century the furnace became a
paper mill worked by steam power. William Whitmore became the tenant in 1818, (fn. 68) Thornton,
Anderson and Horn castle were the tenants in 1826 (fn. 69)
and Grafton, Mole and Baron in 1830 and 1833. (fn. 70)
In 1845 it was a wire mill, (fn. 71) and the buildings with
the pools above and below were still in existence in
about 1850. (fn. 72) By 1865 the premises had apparently
been moved to Alma Street, where there was an
Aston Furnace Mills, (fn. 73) and by 1887-8 the old
buildings had disappeared. (fn. 74)
ASTON BROOK MILL with its pool lay above
the point where the Aston Road crosses the Hockley
Brook. It may have been the newly-built fulling mill
in the tenure of Richard Short in 1532 (fn. 75) and one of
the two fulling mills in Aston in 1585. (fn. 76) In 1721 it
was a fulling mill in the tenure of Zachary Gisborne; (fn. 77) it was apparently at that time also known
as Bourn Work Mill. (fn. 78) It was called Gisborne's Mill
in 1758, (fn. 79) and Hooper's Mill in 1791; Thomas
Hooper had earlier been the tenant of Aston corn
mill and may have converted Aston Brook Mill for
flour milling. (fn. 80) In 1806 an agreement was made
between Walter and Thomas Phillips, tenants and
late owners of the mills, and John Rose of Thimble
Mill on the use of the waters of the brook. (fn. 81) Thomas
Phillips was still miller in 1830 when it was known
as Mr. Phillips' Mill, (fn. 82) but the mill was sometimes
called Aston Mill at this time. (fn. 83) A steam engine had
been installed in the premises by 1830 when steammill power was advertised as to let, and John
Phillips was then described as a timber merchant
and wood turner. (fn. 84) The water wheel continued to be
used, for flour milling. Thomas Powell was miller
in 1850 (fn. 85) and William Best in 1854; (fn. 86) in 1855 the
property came into the hands of the Evans family. (fn. 87)
During their tenure, which lasted at least until 1875,
the premises were still used both for flour milling
and other trades. (fn. 88) It was said that £10,000 worth
of damage was done in a fire there in 1862. (fn. 89) The
pools had disappeared by 1887-8, (fn. 90) but Edward
Evans was a corn merchant at Aston Brook Flour
Mills in 1908. (fn. 91) The site is marked by Pool Street,
Powell Street, and Phillips Street.
THIMBLE MILL with its pool lay in Nechells
above the point where Thimble Mill Lane crosses
the Hockley Brook. It may have been the mill in
'brode more' held by John Norwood in 1532, (fn. 92) and
among the mills in Aston and Nechells mentioned
in the 16th century, (fn. 93) one of which was held by
John Breamotte in 1606. (fn. 94) In 1684 the blade mill
called Breamotte's Mill was leased by Sir Charles
Holte to Joseph Hunt, a Birmingham glover. (fn. 95) In
1749 it was leased to Samuel Birch of Birmingham,
button maker, who rebuilt it and converted it into a
rolling mill. (fn. 96) The mill was first called Thimble
Mill in 1758. (fn. 97) In 1800 it was a 'rolling and thimble
mills belonging to Mr. Rose'. (fn. 98) In 1806 John Rose,
thimble maker of 'Nechells Mills', made an agreement with the tenant of Aston Brook Mill on the
use of the water of the brook. (fn. 99) Rose occupied the
mill together with Charles Emery in 1830, (fn. 1) Mrs.
Rose was owner and occupier in 1833, (fn. 2) and Samuel
Emery occupier in 1834. (fn. 3) At some time between
1758 and 1833 the mill seems to have been rebuilt a
few hundred yards further downstream. (fn. 4) E.
Middleton, metal dealer, was tenant of 'Nechells
Rolling Mill' in 1850, (fn. 5) John Bayliss was tenant in
1855, (fn. 6) and B. Mason in 1858. (fn. 7) The family of Harris,
then described as gun-barrel makers, had become
associated with the mill by 1863 and apparently
remained in occupation for the rest of the mill's
existence. (fn. 8) The premises were described as metalrolling mills in 1887-8. (fn. 9) The mill pool was filled in
when the railway was laid to Windsor Street Gas
Works, but the mill continued in use with a steam
engine until 1918. (fn. 10)
STEEL'S MILL lay a short way downstream
from Thimble Mill, above the point where Thimble
Mill Lane crosses the Hockley Brook, and on the
Aston side of the brook. It was shown as a blade
mill in the early 18th century (fn. 11) and was leased with
Thimble Mill to Samuel Birch in 1749. (fn. 12) It was
called Steel's Mill in 1758. (fn. 13) It appears not to have
had a pool but to have been driven direct from a
leat. It had disappeared by 1833. (fn. 14)
BENTON'S MILL, also called Nechells Park or
Park Mill, (fn. 15) stood on the south side of Plume Street
near its junction with Long Acre. The mill pool
lay some way upstream, above the point where
Holborn Hill crosses the Hockley Brook. (fn. 16) The mill
may have been one of the three mentioned in Aston
and Nechells in 1532 (fn. 17) and during the 16th century, (fn. 18) and may have been that leased to John
Brenard, grinder, in 1619. (fn. 19) The mill was known as
Benton's Mill in 1758. (fn. 20) In 1774 it was leased to
Richard Benton and was used for grinding edge
tools. (fn. 21) During the early 19th century the Benton
family leased the mill to Ezra Millward, a gunbarrel maker; (fn. 22) it was then sometimes called Park
Mill. (fn. 23) By the middle of the century the mill was in
the hands of Paul Moore & Co., who were engaged
in various metal trades, (fn. 24) and who also called the
premises Park Mill. (fn. 25) A. A. Bill, sandpaper manufacturer, occupied the premises in the late 19th
century (fn. 26) and by 1900 the mill had apparently
become part of the Plume Works' industrial premises. (fn. 27) The remains of the mill were demolished
in 1941. (fn. 28)
Mills on the Rea and Bourn Brook
REDNAL AND FROG MILLS. There was a mill
in Rednal Elde, one of the five eldes of King's
Norton, in the late 15th century, (fn. 29) but it is impossible to say whether it was on the Rea or the Callow
Brook, or further south at Rednal itself. Frog Mill,
on one of the streams flowing into the Rea, north
of Rubery Hill, was outside the boundaries of
modern Birmingham. (fn. 30)
HAWKESLEY MILL. Hawkesley or Tessall
Mill stood below the point where Hawkesley Mill
Lane and the Mill Walk cross the Rea. (fn. 31) A mill in
Tessall was first mentioned in 1255-6. (fn. 32) In 1323
William de Hazlewell obtained licence to grant a
mill and land in King's Norton to Richard de
Hawkeslow, who appears to have been the lord of
Hawkesley. (fn. 33) The Tessall mill was in existence in
1425 (fn. 34) and in 1490 William Dene, the miller, was
charged with taking excessive toll. (fn. 35) In 1671 there
was a mill of William Middlemore near Tessall
field. (fn. 36) The mill was marked in 1834. (fn. 37) In 1843 it
was held by Richard Evans, who had interests in
other local corn mills, (fn. 38) and it was shown as
Hawkesley Mill (Corn) in 1882-3. (fn. 39) The premises
may have fallen into disuse shortly after, and
become part of Hawkesley Mill Farm. (fn. 40)
NORTHFIELD MILL stands on the north of
the Rea at the point where Mill Lane meets Quarry
Lane. Mills in Northfield were mentioned in 1273 (fn. 41)
and throughout the 14th and 15th centuries, and
one of these was the manorial corn mill. (fn. 42) It may
have been the mill leased to Cornelius Follow by a
Stourbridge clothier in 1721. (fn. 43) In 1839 Edward
Withers was the tenant, (fn. 44) and in 1851, when it was
called Cotterell's Mill, George Pearson. (fn. 45) James
Hulston was the miller in 1873, (fn. 46) and Aaron Jones
from 1880 to 1900; Walter Morris was miller in
Quarry Lane in 1908. (fn. 47) It is probable that after the
building of the railway in 1840 the mill was no
longer driven by water power. The derelict mill
building and the site of the pool were used as part
of a dump for road-making materials in 1957.
WYCHALL MILL with its pool lies on the
north bank of the Rea west of King's Norton. The
mill was marked in the early 19th century (fn. 48) and
was shown as a rolling mill in 1831. (fn. 49) Charles
Emery was the tenant in 1843 (fn. 50) and G. Ellis & Sons,
metal rollers, occupied the mill in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. (fn. 51) The premises have been used
as a factory in the 20th century and the old mill
buildings only became derelict in the 1950s. A 19thcentury beam engine now in the Birmingham
Industrial Museum was originally at this mill.
HURST MILL and pool lay north of the Rea in
the corner of Camp Lane and Pershore Road South.
In 1221 the manorial mill of King's Norton was
held by Richard Clark. (fn. 52) In 1301 William Jurdan
leased to his brother Thomas a water mill and pool
in King's Norton, (fn. 53) and in 1311 he granted it to
Richard de Brademedewe. (fn. 54) In 1584 Henry Field
left the mill to his niece and her husband William
Whorwood. (fn. 55) In 1625 the mill was owned by Sir
Thomas Whorwood and George Guest and occupied by Edmond Baileys; (fn. 56) it was in the possession
of the Guest family in the 18th century. (fn. 57) Thomas
Oliver was the tenant in 1843, (fn. 58) William Summerton
was miller in King's Norton in 1858, (fn. 59) and an Aaron
Jones was miller at the Hurst Mill from 1873 to
1920. (fn. 60) Thomas Priest & Sons were still milling
flour there in 1930 and Hurst Mill was probably the
last of the Birmingham mills at which flour was
milled. (fn. 61) The site is now (1957) occupied by
industrial premises.
LIFFORD MILL and pool lie on the south side
of Tunnel Lane where it crosses the eastern of the
two branches of the Rea at Lifford. (fn. 62) It may have
been the Dobbs Mill shown in the area in 1787-9. (fn. 63)
The pool and the reservoir below the mill were
formed when the Worcester and Birmingham Canal
was constructed in the early 19th century. (fn. 64) In 1830
the mill was described as a 'rolling mill of 15 horse
power upon a never-failing stream'. (fn. 65) In 1841 Joseph
Davis left it together with Harborne Mill to his son
Samuel. (fn. 66) In 1873 and 1890 it was occupied by
india-rubber manufacturers. (fn. 67) By 1900 it had
become part of the works of J. & E. Sturge, chemical
manufacturers. (fn. 68) The mill building is now derelict,
but both it and Lifford House form part of the
premises of J. & E. Sturge, Ltd. (fn. 69)
HAZELWELL MILL and pool lie on the east of
the Rea immediately above Hazelwell Fordrough.
The three water corn mills in Hazelwell manor in
1704 were probably at this mill, (fn. 70) and the mill was
similarly described when in the tenure of Thomas
Hadley in 1733. (fn. 71) Edward Jordan, who took over
the mill from John White in 1756, was, like the
Hadleys, a gunsmith. The mill was, however, being
used for corn milling, stones in the rye mill and the
wheat mill being mentioned in the lease. (fn. 72) The
three water corn mills were again mentioned in
1776 (fn. 73) and in 1787, (fn. 74) but by the early 19th century
the mill had been converted to metal working. In
1843 and 1863 it was in the tenure of William
Deakin and Sons, sword-cutlers, gun-barrel and
bayonet manufacturers, (fn. 75) and in the 1870s of
William Millward and Sons, sword-cutlers, gun and
pistol-barrel makers. (fn. 76) It was a gun-barrel works in
1886, (fn. 77) but by 1900 had become a rubber factory, (fn. 78)
and was still a rubber factory in 1957. (fn. 79)
DOGPOOL MILL with its pool lies to the west
of the Rea just below the point where the Griffin's
Brook joins the Rea. It was mentioned as Dog Poo'
Mill in 1800 (fn. 80) and was a rolling mill in 1836. (fn. 81) The
tenant in 1843 was John Phipson (fn. 82) and in 1863
Tomlinson and Co., tube- and wire-manufacturers. (fn. 83) By 1875 the mill had been taken over by C.
Clifford and Sons, metal-rollers and tube-makers, (fn. 84)
who were still in occupation in 1957. (fn. 85)
MOOR GREEN MILL. Moor Green, or Farmon's Mill, and its pool, lay on the east of the Rea
just above the point where Holders Lane reaches
the river. The mill, called a blade mill, was already
in existence when the Moore family acquired it
from John Middlemore, together with the manor, in
1597. It was held by the Moore family until 1783
when it was sold by John Moore to James Taylor.
The Serjeant family held the lease of the mill from
Moore and Taylor between 1780 and 1841, and
William Serjeant greatly improved the mill, then
still a blade mill, between 1816 and 1841. In 1841
his widow surrendered the lease to James Taylor
and the freehold was sold to Charles Umpage,
metal-roller. (fn. 86) William Betts and Co., metal-rollers,
occupied the mill in the 1860s and 70s. (fn. 87) It was still
in use as a rolling mill in the 1880s (fn. 88) but seems to
have fallen into disuse shortly after, and only a part
of the wheel channel still remains.
EDGBASTON MILL. Edgbaston, or Avern's
Mill, and pool lay on the west of the Rea just below
the point where the river is joined by the Bourn
Brook. The manorial mill of Edgbaston was mentioned in 1231-2, (fn. 89) and in 1550, (fn. 90) and it was
probably one of the mills in Edgbaston mentioned
in the 17th century. (fn. 91) There were 'four water corn
mills' there in 1700, when Richard Jackson was the
tenant. (fn. 92) The tenant was Edward Richards in 1721 (fn. 93)
and William Edwards in 1778. (fn. 94) The Avern family
had taken over the mill by 1788, (fn. 95) and held it in the
early 19th century when it was known as Avern's
Mill. (fn. 96) Thomas Fullard was the tenant in 1843, (fn. 97)
and W. H. Roper held it in 1855 and 1863. (fn. 98) By
1880 the mill had become a farmhouse. (fn. 99) The
building was still standing in 1898. (fn. 1) The site, south
of Edgbaston Road, is now part of the premises of
the Tally-Ho Clubs.
SPEEDWELL MILL. Speedwell, or Fitter's
Mill, and its pool lay on the west of the Rea above
Balsall Heath Road. It was probably called Fitter's
Mill after the Fitter family, scythesmiths in Bordesley (fn. 2) and mill tenants on the Hawthorn Brook in
the 16th century. (fn. 3) Fitter's Mill was a blade mill in
the tenure of Richard Clarke in 1648, (fn. 4) and a blade
mill with four stones in 1672. (fn. 5) Joseph Clarke was
the tenant in 1700. (fn. 6) A mill is shown there in 1787-
1789. (fn. 7) John Heeley was paying rates for 'the two
Speedwell Mills', in 1810. (fn. 8) This may mean that he
held half the mill, or that he held the whole mill
together with a windmill which was close by. (fn. 9) In
1830 William Fox was making wire-gauze blinds at
the mill, (fn. 10) and in 1843 Hawkins and Hickling were
the tenants. (fn. 11) For some years William Nokes, metal
button manufacturer, occupied the mill as a rolling
mill, (fn. 12) but by 1875 Nokes had new premises, also
called Speedwell Mills, in Chester Street, and the
old building may have been disused. (fn. 13) The mill and
pool had disappeared by 1864, and Princess Road,
Alexandra Road, and the end of Speedwell Road
now stand on the site. (fn. 14)
THE MALT MILL. The Malt, or Moat, Mill
stood in the outer court of the manor house of
Birmingham and was driven by the outflow of the
moat. (fn. 15) Edward Lyttleton claimed in 1534 that he
had held the lease of the mill from William Birmingham's widow and had granted the profits to
Elizabeth Birmingham (later Ludford). (fn. 16) Elizabeth
Birmingham held the mill in 1529 (fn. 17) and her lease
was renewed in 1541. (fn. 18) She appears to have sub-let
the mill to Robert Whitworth, the bailiff of the
manor. (fn. 19) After her death, in 1559, her third husband, William Askerick, (fn. 20) and his second wife and
relict, Mary, were tenants until 1575, when Mary
left it to their infant son William. (fn. 21) The Taylor
family occupied the mill in the first half of the 17th
century. (fn. 22) In 1712 Judd Harding took a lease of the
mill. (fn. 23) The mill was called the Moat blade mill, in
1717, (fn. 24) and in 1720 'a blade mill with the moat
thereunto belonging'. (fn. 25) In the late 18th century it
was a thread mill. (fn. 26) The mill disappeared in the
early 19th century when the moat was filled in and
the site cleared for Smithfield Market which was
opened in 1817. (fn. 27)
TOWN MILL and its pool lay below the Malt
Mill on the stream running from the moat to the
Rea. It was built about 1549 by William Askerick,
the terms of his grant requiring that he should build
a corn mill to be worked by the water of the manor
pool and the watercourses in Holme Park. (fn. 28) The
cutting of a new mill race from the Rea at Vaughton's Hole was apparently not carried out until
later. Askerick was still the tenant in 1562, (fn. 29) and the
mill was left to William Askerick the younger in
1575. (fn. 30) The mill was held by the Taylor family in
the early 17th century, (fn. 31) but was later taken over by
Robert Porter, who converted it into a blade mill. (fn. 32)
This was the mill destroyed by Prince Rupert's men
in 1643 because it was alleged to have turned out
swords for the parliamentary forces only. (fn. 33) After
being rebuilt it appears again to have functioned as
a corn mill. It was probably the mill called Digbeth
Mill, held by John Townsend and later called
Townsend's Mill, in the late 17th century. (fn. 34) In the
early 18th century it was used, at least partly, as a
slitting mill, and was called Farmer's Slitting Mill. (fn. 35)
James Farmer, ironmonger, was paying rent for the
'Town Mill' in 1720, (fn. 36) and in 1728 Joseph Farmer
obtained a lease of 'a water corn mill called the Town
Mill'. (fn. 37) Charles Lloyd occupied the mill in 1731, (fn. 38)
when it was called Lloyd's Slitting and Corn
Mills; (fn. 39) it was still called Lloyd's Slitting Mill later
in the century. (fn. 40) In 1808 it was a slitting mill in the
occupation of Gibson and Shore, ironmasters, but
in 1821 was again being used as a corn mill. (fn. 41) It may
have been a metal mill in 1828-9. (fn. 42) The mill does
not appear to be marked after 1839. The site is
probably occupied by the meat market at the end of
Mill Lane which was opened in 1897. (fn. 43)
HEATH MILL. Heath or Cooper's Mill with its
pool lay on the Rea below Deritend Bridge, at the
northern end of Heath Mill Lane. Several mills,
some of which may have been in one building, were
mentioned in Birmingham in the 15th century. (fn. 44) In
1525, because corn had been taken out of Birmingham to be ground at Aston mills, an agreement was
made between the lords of Birmingham and Aston
that the corn of each manor might be ground at the
mill of either. (fn. 45) Heath Mill in the manor of
Birmingham was leased in 1526 to Gilbert Webb
who was holding it in 1529. (fn. 46) From 1532 (fn. 47) to c.
1554 (fn. 48) it was held by John Prattie (under a lease
said to have been made to him by Edward Birmingham) (fn. 49) who apparently sublet it to members of the
Sherwin family. During the tenures of Ralph and
Nicholas Sherwin, c. 1542-3, a dispute again arose
about corn being taken out of Birmingham to be
ground at Saltley, and probably Duddeston,
mills; (fn. 50) it seems to have been settled by reference
to the agreement of 1525. (fn. 51) In 1554 the Crown
leased Heath Mill to Edward Lyttleton (fn. 52) and in
1557 granted the reversion of this and other leases
to Thomas Marrow. (fn. 53) In spite of claims made by
the heirs of John Prattie (fn. 54) and others (fn. 55) Lyttleton
held the mill (fn. 56) until at least 1592 when he mortgaged it to John Talbot of Craston (Worcs.). (fn. 57) Before
1603 the lease had passed to Richard Taylor and in
that year to Zachary Taylor. (fn. 58) His son Richard was
the tenant in 1649. (fn. 59) Soon after John Cooper
obtained the lease of the mill, and the Cooper
family were the tenants and the mill called Cooper's
Mill until the end of the 18th century. In 1673 John
Cooper was accused of raising the height of the
water above the mill so that wagons could not pass
through the ford next to the bridge at Deritend. (fn. 60)
In 1728 William Cooper undertook to rebuild the
mill within two years and not to raise the level of
the water to the damage of the Town Mill. (fn. 61) It was
still a corn mill in 1756, (fn. 62) but the Cooper family,
who had been scythesmiths, (fn. 63) may have converted
it into a blade mill shortly after. In the early 19th
century the premises were held by James Woolley,
a sword cutler, and were known both as Woolley's
Mill and as Deritend Forge. (fn. 64) By 1828 and until at
least 1835 Thomas Whitmore was a corn miller at
the mill, then called Deritend Mills. (fn. 65) Several
factories were built on adjacent sites at this time and
the old mill buildings apparently became part of the
factory premises. (fn. 66) The remains of the water mill
probably disappeared during the improvements to
the river in the 19th century.
WILLETT'S MEADOW MILL. In 1698 Robert
Rotton, a member of a family which owned land in
Bordesley near the Rea, (fn. 67) was amerced 2s. for an
incroachment on the lord's waste near Duddeston
Bridge. (fn. 68) It was probably on this land that John
Greaves was said to have lately erected a blade mill
in 1707. (fn. 69) Greaves was amerced for diverting water
from the Rea to drive the mill, and continued to
pay 4d. annually until 1711, when Rotton began to
pay it in addition to the 2s. for the incroachment,
which had also become a rent. (fn. 70) By 1732 the mill
had been converted into a wire mill, and was then
said to be situated in Willett's Meadow. Martha
Rotton owned the mill and the meadow, and John
Webster was the tenant of the mill. (fn. 71) Jonathan
Ruston was the owner in 1754. (fn. 72) In 1763 Ruston's
widow Susannah left all her property, including
Willett's Meadow, to her children, but the mill was
not mentioned. (fn. 73) It was not marked in 1760. (fn. 74)
DUDDESTON MILL and pool lay on the west
of the Rea above Duddeston Mill Road. The
original mill was probably built about 1530. (fn. 75) The
mill was rebuilt on a new site in the 1570s; it was
called 'three new water corn mills in Duddeston' in
an agreement of 1576 between Edward Holte of
Duddeston and Edward Arden, the occupier of
Saltley Mill, on the use of a new watercourse there. (fn. 76)
In the same year Holte leased to Arden the 'place
where a mill in times past stood called old Duddeston Mill'. (fn. 77) It remained the manorial corn mill
throughout the 17th century. (fn. 78) It was held at his
death in 1741 by Joseph Farmer, and in 1744 by
James Farmer, ironmonger; the lease was then for
'all corn and other mills'. (fn. 79) In 1756 Hutton 'went
with Will Ryland to Horton's at Duddeston Mill to
have some silver rolled'. (fn. 80) The mill probably continued to be primarily a rolling mill while the lease
was held by the Farmers, who were ironmongers. (fn. 81)
The rebuilding of Saltley Mill weir in 1822 led to a
dispute between the successive occupiers of Duddeston and Saltley mills which was settled by an
agreement between Benjamin Brentnall of Duddeston and John Woodhall of Saltley in 1829. (fn. 82) The
mill was then apparently a corn mill. (fn. 83) The Galton
family owned the mill in the early 19th century (fn. 84)
and the Evans family were tenants between 1845
and 1865. (fn. 85) Shortly after, the mill pool was drained
and the 'Great Moor', which had been between the
mill leat and the river, became a railway goods yard,
still known locally as 'mill meadow'. The course of
the mill leat became that of the river itself. The
building had become a saw mill by 1887-8, (fn. 86) but
seems to have fallen into disuse soon after.
SALTLEY MILL with its pool lay on the east
of the Rea above Saltley Bridge. The mill was in
existence by about 1542-3, when James Wygnall
(or Wednall) was the tenant. (fn. 87) It was called a 'new
mill' in the agreement of 1576, when it was occupied
by Edward Arden. (fn. 88) In 1618, when Sir Thomas
Holte leased it to Zachary Taylor, it was fully
equipped for corn grinding and had two sets of
millstones (fn. 89) and it was still in existence in 1677. (fn. 90)
It had been converted to a blade mill by 1689 (fn. 91) and
was leased as such in 1696. (fn. 92) It was in the tenure
of the Farmer family in 1760 and was perhaps being
used as a rolling mill. (fn. 93) The rebuilding of the mill
weir in 1822 led to a dispute between the successive
occupiers of Duddeston and Saltley mills which
was settled by the payment in 1829 of compensation
by John Woodhall of Saltley. (fn. 94) Woodhall's tenants
in 1828-9 and 1830 were W. & J. Butler, (fn. 95) and
William Butler was tenant in 1833; (fn. 96) the mill was
then apparently a corn mill. S. Butler & Co. were
the tenants of Saltley Wire Mills in 1850. (fn. 97) The
mill was still in existence in 1880, (fn. 98) but had disappeared by 1887-8 (fn. 99) and its site is now occupied
by a gas holder.
NECHELLS PARK MILL. Nechells Park or
Park Mill and its pool lay in the angle formed by
the confluence of the Rea and the Tame. The mill
may have been one of those in Aston and Nechells
manors in existence in 1532 and during the 16th
century; (fn. 1) if it was, it had fallen into decay by 1672,
when it was leased to Thomas Banks, grinder, as
'that blade mill... now newly erected within
Nechells park... in the place where the old Blade
Mill stood' which was to be finished and set
working at Banks's cost. (fn. 2) The mill was leased in 1693
to John Crowley, edge-tool grinder. (fn. 3) In 1700
Crowley was in trouble because the water which he
had diverted to the mill by floodgates in Saltley
Meadow was overflowing and flooding Park Lane. (fn. 4)
The mill apparently decayed again after 1710, (fn. 5) for
in 1746-7 a slitting mill was built by Abraham
Spooner and Edward Knight on land at Nechells
Park which they had recently leased. (fn. 6) When the
lease was renewed in 1768 it was described as a
'slitting mill, formerly a blade mill... called
Nechells Park Mill'. (fn. 7) The lease was again renewed
in 1779 in the names of Spooner and John Knight,
son of the former lessee, (fn. 8) and Park Mill was still
being worked by the Spooner family in 1800. (fn. 9) It
later became a rolling mill occupied in 1828-30 by
Charles Emery and in 1833 owned by Robert
Benton and occupied by the Bordesley Steel
Company. (fn. 10) Soon afterwards a forge was set up on
the premises. (fn. 11) The mill and forge were occupied
in 1839 and 1849 by Samuel Savage (fn. 12) and in 1845
and 1863 by Walter Allcock, both manufacturers of
edge tools. (fn. 13) In 1875 the premises were occupied by
A. W. Wills, another edge-tool manufacturer, (fn. 14)
whose firm gave the name 'Park Mill' to its new
premises when it moved to Wolverhampton. The
modern building on the site of the mill is in
Wharton Street alongside the Birmingham and
Warwick Junction Canal.
CONNOP'S MILL stood on the Stonehouse
Brook on Mill Lane. It was probably one of the
mills in Northfield first mentioned in the 13th
century, (fn. 15) and the mill next to Weoley Castle
referred to in the 15th century; (fn. 16) there was a mill
field and a mill pool in the castle park. The mill was
marked in 1834 and was called Connop's Mill in
1873 when Benjamin Connop was a miller, farmer,
and beer retailer. (fn. 17) It later became the Mill Inn and
Mill Farm; (fn. 18) the mill house, on the south side of the
lane, appears to have become the inn, while the mill
buildings were on the north of the lane. The
buildings seem to have disappeared during the
construction of the Weoley Castle housing estate.
HARBORNE MILL and its pools, one of which
is now a reservoir, lay above Harborne Lane, below
the point where the Bourn Brook is joined by the
Stonehouse and Welche's Brooks. It was in existence before 1554, when half the mill, formerly
leased to John Tottyl, was leased by Ralph Warley
to William Birch. The lease was assigned by John
Birch of Smethwick, fuller, to George Birch in
1588. (fn. 19) In 1605 the mill, then called Cacock's Mill,
was sold by William Holmes of Northfield, who had
bought it from Edward Bowyer, (fn. 20) to Roger Stanley
of Harborne. It was leased to Edward Rotherham
in 1636, and was sold in 1650 by Charles Stanley to
John Darley. (fn. 21) In 1749 it was sold by William
Collins and Thomas White to Edward Jordan, a
gunsmith; (fn. 22) Jordan left it to his son Thomas and he
to his three daughters. (fn. 23) In 1786, when the tenant
was Basil Hunt, gunsmith, the mill was sold by
Hugh Edwards to Thomas Green. (fn. 24) When Green
mortgaged the mill to Catherine Blackman in 1788,
the mill was for the first time called a grinding and
boring mill, formerly a corn mill. (fn. 25) It was a wire
mill in 1819, when it was leased by Theodore Price
and Thomas Green Simcox to Joseph Davis (fn. 26) and
was shown as an iron mill in 1831-2. (fn. 27) In Davis's
will of 1841, in which the mill was devised to his
son Samuel, it was again described as a flour mill. (fn. 28)
By 1863 the mill was occupied by Thomas Millington, steel pen manufacturer; (fn. 29) it was called a steel
mill in the 1880s, (fn. 30) and was still in the hands of
Thomas Millington and Co. in 1908. (fn. 31) The build
ings were standing in 1954 (fn. 32) but were no longer in
existence in 1961.
BOURNBROOK MILLS. Bournbrook Mill and
its pool lay on the south of the Bourn Brook above
the Bristol Road. It was built as a blade mill by
Henry Cambden the elder, a knife cutler, on part of
Gower's Farm in 1707. Cambden mortgaged the
premises to Alice Lloyd in 1720, and in 1727, after
Cambden's death, Alice Lloyd assigned the mortgage to Henry Carver, brassfounder. (fn. 33) The building
was called a 'mill or forge' in 1816 when it was
occupied by Heeley & Co., gunmakers, (fn. 34) a forge in
1839, when held by James Kirby, (fn. 35) and a rolling
mill in 1863 when occupied by Noah Fellows, an
ironfounder and metal roller. (fn. 36) Arthur Holden,
paint manufacturer, held Bournbrook Mill in 1873;
the former mill pool, known as Kirby's Pools, was
then used for boating. (fn. 37) The premises were occupied
from 1880 to 1900 by Frederick Spurrier and in 1908
by Henry and Frederick Spurrier, metal rollers.
The pool had then been filled in and industrial
buildings erected on the site. (fn. 38)
Another mill was shown in 1787-9 on the most
westerly of the streams from Edgbaston Pool where
it joined the Bourn Brook near the Bristol Road. (fn. 39)
OVER MILL stood at the outlet from the lower
of the pools in Edgbaston Park formed by the damming of the Chad Brook. It was in existence by
1557, when it was occupied by the King family and
may have been a fulling mill. (fn. 40) It may have become
a blade mill by 1624 when William Hunt, a bladesmith, bequeathed the lease to Thomas Hunt and
George Greenwood. (fn. 41) In 1648 and 1672 it was held
by Barnaby Smith, a member of a family of ironmongers. (fn. 42) It was probably the mill occupied in
1700 by John Dalloway, one of a family of bladesmiths; (fn. 43) the mill was shown as a blade mill shortly
after. (fn. 44) William Dalloway held the mill, together
with the Pebble Mill, in 1788. (fn. 45) In 1810 it was held
by Richard Anderton, a member of a family of
cutlers. (fn. 46) John Spurrier then occupied the house at
the mill, and by 1843 the Spurriers were working
the mill as a rolling mill. (fn. 47) In the 1850s and 1860s
Thomas Spurrier, and in the 1870s Frederick
Spurrier, gold and silver rollers, occupied the mill,
then called Edgbaston Rolling Mill. (fn. 48) Shortly after
the family business was moved to the Bournbrook
Mill (fn. 49) and the Over Mill became disused, the lower
of the two pools retaining the name Spurrier's
Pool. (fn. 50) Some of the derelict buildings of the mill
still stand (1957).
PEBBLE MILL lay on the Bourn Brook below,
and its pool above, the junction of Pebble Mill Road
and Pershore Road. It was probably one of the
fulling mills held by the King family in the 16th
century. (fn. 51) In 1648 it was held by Guy Benson, (fn. 52)
who appears to have been still in occupation in 1672,
when it was described as a blade mill called King's
Mill. (fn. 53) By 1700 the mill, now called Benson's Mill,
had passed to Thomas Bowcoate. (fn. 54) In 1788 it was
apparently being worked by John Dalloway together
with the Over Mill, (fn. 55) and in 1810 was in the hands
of John Heeley, one of a family of gunbarrelmakers. (fn. 56) William Kendrick, the tenant in 1835 and
1843, had a cutlery business in the Bull Ring. (fn. 57) By
1850 it had been converted to corn grinding, the
tenant being Joseph Flecknoe, miller, (fn. 58) and William
Summerton, also a corn miller, was the tenant in
1863 and 1875. (fn. 59) The premises were occupied by
Henry Harrison, dairyman, from 1880 to 1890, and
seem to have been a farm in the 1920s. (fn. 60) The Cannon
Hill Museum is now close to the site occupied by
the mill.
WARD END MILL and its pool lay on the Wash
Brook north of Ward End Hall. The mill in Little
Bromwich was first mentioned in 1425, (fn. 61) and was
regularly mentioned in connexion with estates there
in the next 300 years, (fn. 62) being occasionally referred
to as two watermills. (fn. 63) It was occupied by Widow
Jorden in 1759. (fn. 64) The Lee family, (fn. 65) Henry Drake,
John Drew, and A. J. Tongue were tenants in the
19th century. (fn. 66) The mill was part of the Ward End
Hall estate when this was sold in 1842. (fn. 67) William
Black, farmer and corn merchant, was the tenant in
1900. (fn. 68) The mill pool has been filled in and forms
part of the site of the modern Ingleton Road.
Mills on the Cole
MILLS ON THE CHINN BROOK. There was
a mill at Moundesley in King's Norton, probably
on the upper reaches of the Chinn Brook, in the late
15th century. (fn. 69) It may have been the same as the
Crab Mill of Crabmill Lane and Crabmill Farm
south of Moundesley Hall; (fn. 70) if so, it was outside the
boundaries of modern Birmingham.
Mill Pool Hill, where the Alcester Road leaves
the valley of the Chinn Brook, has been so called
since the 18th century, (fn. 71) and a Mill Pool Hill Farm
stood in the neighbourhood of the modern Meadfoot Avenue. (fn. 72) Neither the mill nor the pool can be
identified.
TRITTIFORD MILL stood at the junction of
Trittiford Road and Highfield Road, the mill pool
lying on the other side of Highfield Road. (fn. 73) In
addition to the water from the Cole stored in the
mill pool the mill also used a watercourse from the
Chinn Brook. (fn. 74) The mill was first mentioned in 1778
when Joseph Baldwin was the tenant, (fn. 75) and when
advertised as to let in 1783 it was described as 'a
new and complete water corn mill'. (fn. 76) The tenant
was William Harris in 1790 (fn. 77) and William Kendrick
in 1809. The mill was mainly in the hands of the
Tabbener family during the first half of the 19th
century and of the Hill family in the second half,
when the mill was converted to use as a rolling mill
for pen steel, (fn. 78) the flour milling machinery being
transferred to Sarehole Mill. (fn. 79) A steam engine had
been installed by 1883. (fn. 80) Alfred Hill occupied the
mill until 1926. (fn. 81) The mill pool is now the boating
pool in Trittiford Park.
COLDBATH OR HOLTE'S MILL. In 1437 a
mill was granted by Aymer (Adelmare) Holte of
Greethurst in Yardley to the Mountfort family. (fn. 82)
In 1519 the water mill called Holt Mill or Greethurst was granted by Thomas Holte to Robert
Gresswold, (fn. 83) and it was still in existence in 1542. (fn. 84)
It may have been one of the water corn mills in
Swanshurst and Greethurst mentioned in 1664. (fn. 85)
The Coldbath or Lady Mill, which later stood below
Yardley Wood Road near the junction with Coldbath Road on the stream joining the Cole from
Sarehole, was situated in Greethurst. (fn. 86) It may well
have been identical with Holte's Mill. In 1746
Coldbath Mill was described as a water corn mill
in the tenure of Thomas Hadley. (fn. 87) William
Rotheram was the tenant for several years, (fn. 88) and it
was still a water corn mill when part of the Grevis
estate was sold in 1766. (fn. 89) When what was probably
this mill was advertised in 1789 it was said to have
been 'lately used in the thread business'; (fn. 90) the
Yates family was in occupation at that time and for
some years afterwards. (fn. 91) The mill was still in
existence in 1834 but was probably pulled down
shortly after. (fn. 92)
SAREHOLE MILL with its pool lies on the
west of the Cole at the junction of Wake Green and
Cole Bank Roads. It is said to have paid a small sum
annually to Maxstoke Priory in the Middle Ages. (fn. 93)
In 1542 Daniel Benford of Yardley granted to John
Bedell land and a watercourse coming from Holte's
Mill on which to build a corn mill. (fn. 94) If Holte's Mill
is correctly identified with Coldbath Mill (fn. 95) then
Bedell apparently reconstructed Sarehole Mill at
this time. Since Sarehole Mill was known as Biddle's
Mill in the 16th century (fn. 96) this explanation seems
probable. When Richard Eaves bought the Yardley
estate in 1727, it was described as a water corn mill
called High Wheel Mill, late in the tenure of
William Richards. (fn. 97) In the middle of the century
James Green, Judd Harden or Harding, William
Tallis, and Joseph Bellamy were tenants of the mill.
Matthew Boulton the elder spent the last years of
his life at Sarehole, and his widow held the mill in
1760. (fn. 98) In 1768 Richard Eaves cut a new leat from
the Whyrl Hole in Sarehole Common, now near the
Four Arches Bridge, to supplement the stream from
Coldbath which had driven the mill until then; it
was then a grinding mill. (fn. 99) In 1773 'Biddle's Mill
otherwise the Little Mill' was described as a water
corn mill 'lately taken down and new built' by
Richard Eaves, and in 1775 was said to be a 'complete new erected corn mill, well supplied with
water'. (fn. 1) John Jones was the tenant from 1768 to
1775, (fn. 2) and John Alien was in occupation from about
1777 to 1780. (fn. 3) The Siviter family was associated
with the mill in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, followed by Thomas Anderton, Samuel
Batsford, and John Mander, (fn. 4) and the Andrew family
were tenants from 1858 to the early 20th century. (fn. 5)
A steam engine had been installed and a chimney
added to the buildings by 1873, but the mill
remained a corn mill. (fn. 6) The buildings of 1773 still
stand and have been given to the city council for
preservation. (fn. 7) In 1960 they were reported to be in
a dilapidated state. (fn. 8)
GREET MILL with its pool lay above the bridge
by which the Stratford Road crosses the Cole. It
was in existence by 1275, (fn. 9) and was also mentioned
in the 16th century. (fn. 10) William Richards, James
Green, (fn. 11) Judd Harding, (fn. 12) John Truss, (fn. 13) and James
Bernard (fn. 14) were tenants in the 18th century. In 1775
the mill was described as a 'complete new erected
water corn mill' (fn. 15) and was still a corn mill in 1793. (fn. 16)
By 1799, when William Bonell, a grinder, was
tenant, it may have been converted into a blade
mill. (fn. 17) During 1806 the mill was considerably
altered and then leased to Henry Osborne, a sword
cutler of Bordesley. (fn. 18) By 1836-8 when Daniel
Ledsam, plated metal manufacturer, was the tenant,
the mill may have become a rolling mill. (fn. 19) Shortly
after Edwin Harford, a leather dresser, was tenant, (fn. 20)
and in 1873 Greet needle mills were occupied by a
Mr. James. (fn. 21) The mill had disappeared by 1887-8, (fn. 22)
but the remains of the mill and the mill stream were
rediscovered during the construction of a new
bridge there in 1913. (fn. 23)
HAY MILL stood on the east of the Cole above
the Coventry Road. William Lewis was the tenant
from 1756 to 1776, Joseph Smith from 1777 to 1790,
and a Mr. Gill in 1810. (fn. 24) In 1820 it was said to be
in use as a blade mill but suitable for conversion to
corn milling or paper making. (fn. 25) Between 1836 and
1840 it was held by William Deakin, (fn. 26) who may have
been a gun-barrel or bayonet maker. (fn. 27) Shortly after,
Smith and Horsfall and James Horsfall, musicalwire maker, became the tenants, (fn. 28) and the firm of
Webster and Horsfall, wire and cable makers, were
the tenants until the end of the century. The first
Atlantic cable was made there. (fn. 29) The premises have
remained a wire mill in the hands of Latch &
Batchelor, Ltd., since 1900. (fn. 30)
MEDLEY'S MILL. There was a watermill in
Bordesley in the 14th century, (fn. 31) and Arthur Heath
was said in a rental of Bordesley to be holding 'the
mill' in 1586. (fn. 32) The mill was probably on the Spark
Brook at the Coventry Road crossing, and may be
identified with Medley's Mill, which existed in
1760, (fn. 33) and the boring mill shown on 18th-century
maps just below Hay Mill. (fn. 34)
YARDLEY MILL. Yardley or Wash Mill and
its pool lay on the east of the Cole near the junction
of Millhouse Road and Wash Lane. In 1385 the
Earl of Warwick granted to Richard Bradewell the
site of a mill in Yardley called Wodemill on which
to build a mill, (fn. 35) and Bradewell still held Wodemill
in 1403-4. (fn. 36) What was probably this mill, then
called Oldemill, was subject to the same rent of
6s. 8d. in 1479-80, but it did not pay rent in that
year. (fn. 37) Two watermills in the manor of Yardley
were mentioned in the 16th and 17th centuries, (fn. 38)
and three in Yardley and King's Norton in 1648. (fn. 39)
Yardley Mill was shown in the 18th century (fn. 40) and
may have been the mill occupied by Richard Shaw
in 1797. (fn. 41) It remained a corn mill in the 19th
century, and was occupied by Thomas Wardbrough
(1840-4), John Thornton (1846-51), Joseph Lee
(1852-7), and Henry Smith (1859-82). (fn. 42) It was
marked as a corn mill in 1886, (fn. 43) and may have
become a farm in the early 20th century. (fn. 44)
STECHFORD MILL and pool lay on the west
of the Cole above Stechford Bridge. It was in the
hands of Giles de Erdington in 1249-50, (fn. 45) and in
the 15th century was occupied by the heirs of
William West, (fn. 46) John West being the tenant in
1463. (fn. 47) The mill is shown on 18th-century maps, (fn. 48)
and John Mockley was tenant of the mill pool in
1759. (fn. 49) Thomas Smith was the tenant in 1833, (fn. 50)
but the mill disappeared shortly after. (fn. 51) It is said to
have been a blade mill (fn. 52) and a paper mill in the
early 19th century. (fn. 53)
BABBS MILL stands on the southern branch
of the Cole just inside the boundary of modern
Birmingham, in Sheldon. It was in existence in the
early 18th century. (fn. 54) In 1751 John Barrs, a baker,
of Yardley, took it over from Edward Cook of
Sheldon, (fn. 55) and John Andrews was the miller in
1850. (fn. 56) It was still a corn mill in 1889, (fn. 57) but by 1961
the buildings, though still standing, had been
converted into cottages.
BROOMHALL MILL. The long pool on the
Westley Brook, which joins the Hatchford Brook and
the Cole, now in Fox Hollies Park, was shown as an
'Old Mill Pool' in 1886. (fn. 58) A mill called Broomhall
Mill existed there in the late 18th century and was
occupied from 1778 to 1803 by members of the Shaw
family. (fn. 59)
Windmills
COOPER'S WINDMILL stood on the west of the
Rea near Heath Mill. It was first shown in 1731 (fn. 60)
and called Cooper's Mill in 1753. (fn. 61) It was probably
worked in conjunction with Heath Mill, which was
occupied by the Cooper family at that time. (fn. 62)
Windmill Piece was shown at the end of Heath Mill
Lane in 1760. (fn. 63)
CHAPMAN'S WINDMILL gave its name to
Windmill Street, (fn. 64) off Holloway Head. It is said to
have been built about 1745 by Samuel Chapman,
who was the owner in 1774. (fn. 65) Thomas Griffiths,
miller, was in occupation in 1777, (fn. 66) and the windmill was shown in 1778. (fn. 67) It was later in the hands
of W. Martin. (fn. 68) It appears on maps of the late 18th
and early 19th centuries, (fn. 69) but was in a ruinous
condition in the 1850s. (fn. 70) The mill was afterwards
converted into a summer house, from the top of
which fine panoramic views of the town could be
obtained, but was demolished in the 1870s. (fn. 71)
BASKERVILLE'S WINDMILL. John Baskerville, the printer, erected a windmill on his estate on
Easy Hill some time after 1745. The 'conical
building in my own premises heretofore used as a
mill' is mentioned in his will and he left directions
that he should be buried in the building, but it is
not clear for what purpose the mill had been used.
It has been said that he made paper there, (fn. 72) but it is
possible that he was concerned only with the
finishing processes that would provide a suitable
surface for his type. (fn. 73)
HUTTON'S WINDMILL. In 1759 William
Hutton leased two acres of waste land in Handsworth on which to build a mill. (fn. 74) The piece of land
lies off the modern Livingstone Road. Having little
technical knowledge Hutton suffered badly at the
hands of dishonest workmen and although he
eventually succeeded in making a small quantity of
paper, he gave up the venture. (fn. 75) He was persuaded
to convert the mill to corn grinding, (fn. 76) but with no
better success, and in 1762 he sold it to Josiah
Honey borne who used it for polishing brass nails. (fn. 77)
Windmill Piece, but not the mill, was marked in
1794, (fn. 78) and the land was sold without mention of
the mill in 1813. (fn. 79)
OTHER WINDMILLS. There was a windmill
attached to the manor of Greet in 1664. (fn. 80) What was
probably the same mill was mentioned in Yardley
in the late 17th century, (fn. 81) and was occupied by
Richard Barrs in 1724. (fn. 82) It was shown in 18thcentury maps on the east of the Cole between Greet
and Hay Mills. (fn. 83) The Windmill Piece at Lea Hall,
Yardley, mentioned in the 19th century probably
marks the site of another mill. (fn. 84) There appear to
have been two windmills on the east of the Hawthorn
Brook in Erdington. A windmill north of the Over
Mill was occupied by Elizabeth Oldacre in 1833,
and in the same year a Windmill Hill was shown
north-east of the Dwarfholes Mill. (fn. 85) In 1773 John
Taylor granted to John Alien a windmill near Wake
Green, Moseley; (fn. 86) there was also a windmill on
Birmingham Heath, (fn. 87) a windmill at Saltley (fn. 88) and
one in Edgbaston, (fn. 89) and in 1753 a 'mill house' near
Dale End. (fn. 90)