ANCIENT MILLS.
In 1086 there were 8 mills on
the manor of (West) Ham owned jointly by Robert
Gernon and Ranulph Peverel; there had been 9 in
1066. (fn. 1) All of them must have been water-mills on
the Lea or its branches, and they probably included
at least some of the mills identified below. One
other mill, though entered in Domesday Book under
Leyton, appears to have been in West Ham. In 1086
this was held by Ralph Baynard as a tenant of Westminster Abbey. (fn. 2) It was probably the mill at Stratford which the abbey claimed to have been given by
Aelfnoth of London, nephew of Swein. (fn. 3) There are
references to that abbey's mill at Stratford up to
1400, (fn. 4) but by 1535 Westminster held only pasture
land there. (fn. 5) The location of the mill is unknown.
Presumably it was on the Lea near West Ham's
boundary with Leyton.
From the Middle Ages onwards water-mills can
be identified on five sites in West Ham. Three were
at Stratford, north of the causeway (High Street)
between Bow Bridge and Channelsea Bridge: Fotes,
later St. Thomas's (or Pudding) Mill, Spilemans
(or City) Mill, and Saynes (or Waterworks) Mill.
Farther south were Wiggen, later Honeredes or the
Abbey Mill, on Channelsea river, and the Three
Mills, which before modern alterations to the waterways stood at the confluence of Three Mills Back
river, Three Mills Wall river, Channelsea river, and
the main channel of the Lea. (fn. 6) Down stream from the
Three Mills, on the west bank of the Lea, were the
Four Mills of Bromley (Mdx.). All these mills were
originally tidal, and for most of their history they
continued to depend on water-power, for which they
were inevitably in competition. In the Middle Ages
they must have been employed mainly in grinding
flour for the bakers of Stratford. (fn. 7) This was a
flourishing trade, and from an early date each mill
comprised a pair or a group rather than a single one.
In the 13th and 14th centuries there are references to
fulling mills on two of the sites. In the late 16th and
early 17th centuries several mills were manufacturing gunpowder, an industry then new in England. (fn. 8)
There are also references to oil-mills in West Ham
at that period. (fn. 9) At the same time the struggle
for water-power became fiercer, causing violent
disputes. (fn. 10) The mills at Stratford were the most
vulnerable, since they were the farthest up stream, and
in 1711 the millers of Saynes and Spilemans were in
desperate straights because the Bromley millers had
penned up the tidal water. (fn. 11) During the 18th century
the situation was somewhat eased by the introduction, at the Three Mills and St. Thomas's Mills, of
distilling, which did not need so much water-power,
and by the additional use of windmills on or near all
the ancient sites. By that period there was also a
windmill near the Pigeons public house in Romford
Road. Since the early 19th century all West Ham's
ancient mills have been demolished except the
Three Mills.
The earliest mill in West Ham recorded by name
was Wiggen Mill (possibly meaning 'Wicga's Mill' (fn. 12) ),
later called Honeredes or the Abbey Mill, lying on
the Channelsea river within the precincts of Stratford Abbey. This was a water-mill, which was
bought by Maud (d. 1118), queen of Henry I, and
given by her to Barking Abbey as part of an endowment for Bow and Channelsea bridges. (fn. 13) It was
later bought from Barking by Stratford Abbey,
which retained it until the Dissolution. In 1538 the
Abbey Mill comprised two water-mills under one
roof. (fn. 14) In 1539 the mill was granted in reversion to
(Sir) Peter Meautis or Mewtas. (fn. 15) It descended in
the Meautis family until 1633, when it was sold,
along with other parts of the abbey site, to (Sir)
John Nulls. (fn. 16)
In 1662 Lady (Mary) Nulls, widow of Sir John,
and their eldest son Peter Nulls, sold the Abbey Mill
to William Curtis of Mile End (Mdx.) for £7,127. (fn. 17)
Curtis, by his will proved in 1670, devised the mill
to his brother John in trust for certain family
purposes, (fn. 18) in accordance with which it was sold in
1672 to John Phillips of London. (fn. 19) By his will dated
1674 Phillips devised half the mill to Christ's Hospital (Lond.) and half to his wife Bridget for life, with
reversion to the hospital. Christ's Hospital, which
was in full possession of the mill by 1682, habitually
let it on long leases. (fn. 20) The lessees often sub-let. The
hospital sold the freehold of the mill in 1914 to West
Ham borough council. (fn. 21) In 1881 the mill had been
let to William and James Hunt, whose family remained tenants until about 1936. (fn. 22) It had apparently
ceased to operate by 1929. (fn. 23) Throughout its history
it seems to have been concerned mainly with cornmilling, but in 1703 it was producing oil from rape
and linseed; by 1735 it included a smithy. (fn. 24)
The Abbey Mill stood on a small island in the
Channelsea river. (fn. 25) It was rebuilt in 1768 at a cost
of £7,676. (fn. 26) An engraving of 1783 shows a large
group of buildings dominated by a smock windmill. (fn. 27)
In 1819 the water-mill stood on the east of the site,
the windmill on the west, and an engine house
behind the windmill. (fn. 28) The mill was burnt down
in 1861 or 1862. (fn. 29) It was rebuilt in 1863–4, (fn. 30) as a
tall brick structure. (fn. 31) During the Second World War
it was again burnt down, and most of the ruins were
removed in 1967, when Abbey Road was straightened and a new bridge built. (fn. 32)
Fotes Mill, later called St. Thomas's Mill or
Pudding Mill, was at the junction of Marshgate
Lane and Pudding Mill Lane. It seems to have been
the mill at Stratford which, about 1200, Richard son
of Ranulph, and Hawise his wife conveyed in fee to
Thomas Loc and his wife Sabina. (fn. 33) By a later
charter, probably about 1245, Sabina of Benfleet,
widow of John Faucilun, granted to her son William
Faucilun an annual rent of 9s. 6d. which she had
been receiving from the hospital of St. Thomas of
Acre (Lond.) for a fulling mill at Stratford. (fn. 34) It
appears from this charter that the mill was acquired
by the hospital on lease from the Locs or their
successors the Fauciluns. In 1244 Isaac, son of Josce
the Rabbi (le prestre), a Jew, had an interest in the
rent from the mill. (fn. 35) William, son of John Faucilun,
granted 6s. 8d. rent from the fulling mill called
'Fotesmelne' in West Ham to Katherine, widow of
Robert Faucilun. (fn. 36) This grant was probably made
soon after that made by Sabina of Benfleet. A little
later, apparently in the 1250s, John son of Robert
Faucilun granted to the priory of Holy Trinity,
Aldgate (Lond.), the whole rent of 9s. 6d. issuing
from the mill at Stratford held by St. Thomas of
Acre. (fn. 37) The hospital later fell behind with this rent,
but in 1285 it undertook to clear off the arrears and
to pay promptly in future. (fn. 38) In 1291 the hospital had
an income of £6 16s. 4d. from rent and a mill (or
mills) in West Ham. (fn. 39) In 1304 it held a fulling mill
and the site of another mill, both north of the chalk
causeway at Stratford. (fn. 40) This lost mill seems to
have been the one formerly belonging to the Fauciluns, for in 1306 the hospital made an agreement
with Holy Trinity concerning 9s. 6d. rent previously
payable from the mill at Stratford, now destroyed. (fn. 41)
The lost mill seems to have been rebuilt by 1315,
when the hospital had two corn water-mills at Stratford. (fn. 42) The second mill was probably that given to
the hospital in free alms by John Richeman, at an
unknown date. (fn. 43) It was stated in the 15th century
that since the reign of Henry III the hospital had
had two water-mills at Stratford called St. Thomas's
Mills. (fn. 44)
St. Thomas of Acre was dissolved in 1538, and in
1544 the king leased St. Thomas's Mills to his
servant Gerard Harman or Harmond. (fn. 45) The mills
had lately been occupied by Stefan von Haschenperg, an engineer in the king's service who had
fallen out of favour. (fn. 46) In 1547 Harman's lease was
converted into a tenure in fee. (fn. 47) He died in 1559
leaving Susan Harman his daughter and heir, (fn. 48) who
seems to have carried the property in marriage to
Nicholas Sturley or Strelley. Sturley and his wife
Susan were holding the mills in 1573, and conveyed
them in 1589 to Thomas and Christopher Gardiner. (fn. 49)
'The Gunpowder Mill, late Mr. Sturley's', was
mentioned in 1597. (fn. 50) The Gardiners retained the
mills at least until 1646, when Thomas Gardiner,
possibly son of the above Christopher Gardiner,
sought permission to compound, as a Royalist
delinquent, for estates including a water-mill in
West Ham. (fn. 51) The mills appear to have passed subsequently to Christopher Mercer, whose daughter
Anne married John Swale. In 1668 Anne and John
sold to Sir Thomas Chambers a water-mill, once 'two
mills under one roof', called St. Thomas's Mills. (fn. 52)
It was stated in 1796 that St. Thomas's Mills had
previously belonged to the Grenville family, of
whom the marquess of Buckingham had sold them a
few years earlier to Mr. Jones. (fn. 53) How long the
Grenvilles had held the freehold is not known, but
for much of the 18th century the mills were in any
case controlled by lessees. Peter Lefevre (d. 1751),
who bought the Three Mills in 1727, had acquired
the lease of St. Thomas's Mills by 1734, when he
expanded his distillery. (fn. 54) After Lefevre's death, his
widow conveyed the remainder of the lease to his
nephew John Lefevre and Daniel Bisson, who in
1752 sub-let St. Thomas's Mills, for the remaining
20 years of the lease, to John Grace. (fn. 55) St. Thomas's
Mills then comprised a water corn-mill, a malt
mill-house, and a windmill. In 1764 Grace sold the
lease to his sons, and they sold it in 1767 to Thomas
Gardner. Gardner immediately sub-let the premises
to three other persons, one of whom opened a paper-mill, apparently in St. Thomas's water-mill. (fn. 56)
In 1811 St. Thomas's Mill was the property of
'Messrs. Jones and Morley', who were probably
identical with Henry Jones and Robert Morley,
mentioned together in 1801. (fn. 57) Richard Morley (or
Mawley) was the owner in 1834. (fn. 58) The mill was later
acquired by the Eastern Counties Railway, which
offered it for sale in 1838. (fn. 59) The East London Waterworks Co. were the owners by 1853. (fn. 60) In 1875 the
Waterworks Co. sold the mill to Du Barry & Co.,
which had been the lessee since 1864. (fn. 61) Du Barry
& Co., originally a flour miller, was later a manufacturer of patent food. (fn. 62) It operated at St. Thomas's
Mill until about 1925. (fn. 63) In 1926 Du Barry sold the
mill to William Abbott, a builder. (fn. 64) About 1934 it
was demolished as part of the River Lee Flood
Relief Scheme. (fn. 65)
St. Thomas's windmill, mentioned in the lease of
1752, was possibly that shown on 18th-century
maps, on the east bank of Pudding Mill river, about
¼ m. north of High Street. (fn. 66) An engraving (1837) of
the new Stratford viaduct of the Eastern Counties
Railway shows what was probably the same mill,
immediately south of the railway. (fn. 67) It was a postmill then in good condition. It seems to have
disappeared soon after. In 1813 and 1838 there was
a second windmill attached to St. Thomas's Mill. (fn. 68)
It was possibly on the same site as the water-mill.
Saynes Mill, on Waterworks river, and Spilemans
Mill, on City Mill river, were closely connected for
most of their history. From the 13th century both
were part of the endowment of London Bridge,
administered by the wardens of the bridge house of
St. Thomas, and later by the bridge house committee
of the City corporation. (fn. 69) They were sometimes
known, together, as the City Mills, but from the
later 18th century that name was used only for the
former Spilemans Mill.
The original forms of its name suggest that
Saynes Mill means 'the lord's mill', (fn. 70) and early in
the 13th century it was held of Richard de Montfitchet, lord of a large manor in East and West Ham,
by Walter de Covelee. Covelee granted his right in
the mill to St. Thomas, probably before 1221, (fn. 71) and
about the same time Montfitchet made a similar
grant, subject to an annual rent of 32s. (fn. 72) The wardens
of the bridge later granted the mill to Henry Schileman or Skileman, who was to pay annually 26s. 8d. to
them, and 32s. to the lord. (fn. 73) Schileman's son Edmund
granted the mill to Richard Renger or Rengery of
London, to hold of the wardens of the bridge for 60s.
a year. (fn. 74) The above conveyances, none of which is
dated, must all have been made before 1232. (fn. 75) Renger
later granted the mill back to St. Thomas in free
alms. (fn. 76) In 1248, apparently after Richard Renger's
death, his son John made a further conveyance of
the mill to the bridge house. (fn. 77) Saynes Mill is
mentioned, as a water-mill, in 1304, (fn. 78) and again in
1354, when it and Spilemans Mill were leased to
Nicholas atte Wyke of Stratford. (fn. 79)
In the 17th and 18th centuries the City corporation usually let Saynes Mill on long leases. (fn. 80) Here, as
elsewhere, the lessees sometimes sub-let. In 1615
the property comprised a water-mill and 38 a. land. (fn. 81)
For many years (c. 1628–76) the mill was occupied
by members of the Slipper family, and was sometimes called Slippers Mill. (fn. 82) In 1652, after recent
rebuilding, there were two water-mills. (fn. 83) The West
Ham Waterworks Co., founded about 1745, proposed, in its original articles of agreement, to set up
works on land to be rented from John Cox of West
Ham. (fn. 84) Cox was then the lessee of Saynes Mill, and
by 1762, if not before, the Waterworks company
had bought the residue of his lease, which included
about 30 a. land as well as the mill itself. (fn. 85) It was
stated in 1775 that the company had rebuilt the
corn-mill and had installed a pumping engine on
the east side of the premises. (fn. 86) The West Ham
Waterworks Co., and its successor, the East London
Waterworks Co., retained the mill until 1883. (fn. 87) In
the 19th century Saynes Mill was known as the
Waterworks Mill. In 1873–81 it was occupied by
factories. (fn. 88) It had disappeared by 1893–4. (fn. 89)
In 1720 Saynes Mill included a windmill as well
as a water-mill. (fn. 90) In 1744–6 and 1777 there was a
windmill east of Waterworks river, about ¼ m. north
of High Street. (fn. 91) Drawings of it made in 1849 show
a derelict postmill. (fn. 92)
Spilemans Mill was held about the middle of the
13th century by John Spileman and Roger son of
Roger of London. John, son and heir of Roger son
of Roger, granted the site of the mill to Walter
Everard, draper of London. (fn. 93) Everard sold it to
Lawrence Stede of Stratford, who granted it to the
wardens of London Bridge at 1d. rent. (fn. 94) These
conveyances all appear to have been made before
1298–9, when Richard of St. Albans and Margaret
his wife quitclaimed her dower in the mill. (fn. 95) She
had previously been the wife of Lawrence le Redere,
who was probably identical with Lawrence Stede.
Spilemans Mill was mentioned, as a fulling mill, in
1304 and 1354. (fn. 96)
In the 17th and 18th centuries the City corporation was letting Spilemans Mill, with 5 a. land, on
long leases. (fn. 97) In 1600 it comprised two water-mills
under one roof. (fn. 98) In 1615 one of these was called the
Gunpowder Mill. (fn. 99) In 1640 a new lessee undertook
to build a new corn-mill in place of one recently
removed. (fn. 100) In 1738 Spilemans comprised a cornmill, fulling mill, limekiln, mill-house, old boarded
house, warehouse, and five cottages. (fn. 101) The main
buildings were ruinous; the corn-mill had been out
of action for eight or nine years and the fulling mill
was untenanted. Captain John Rochester, whose lease
was renewed in 1739, undertook to rebuild the
premises, and in 1742 he claimed to have spent
nearly £4,000 in doing so. (fn. 102) He appears to have
rebuilt the fulling mill as a corn-mill. (fn. 103) The lease of
1739 stipulated that Rochester was not to use the
mills as gunpowder-mills. Early in the 19th century
Spilemans, now called City Mills, was occupied by
several tenants. Part of the premises was leased in
1805 by Howard & Allen, manufacturing chemists. (fn. 104)
In 1818 other parts of the mill were being used for
corn-grinding, and for calendering, presumably of
paper. (fn. 105) Howard & Allen, later Howards & Sons,
remained at the City Mills until 1914, and appears
gradually to have taken over on lease the whole of
the ancient site of Spilemans, and also much of the
adjoining land to the east which previously belonged
to Saynes Mill. (fn. 106) After 1914 the City of London,
which had retained the freehold, let the premises in
separate lots to a number of small manufacturers. (fn. 107)
In 1932–3 the City Mills were demolished under the
River Lee Flood Relief Scheme. (fn. 108)
The Three Mills, belonging to Stratford Abbey,
may well have been among the oldest in West Ham,
but nothing is known of their history before 1528,
when they were on lease from the sacrist of the
abbey. (fn. 109) In 1539 they were granted to (Sir) Peter
Meautis, (fn. 110) and they subsequently descended along
with the Abbey Mill until 1670. In the later 16th
century the Three Mills actually comprised two
water-mills. (fn. 111) In 1588 one of these was a corn-mill
and the other a gunpowder-mill. (fn. 112) William Curtis,
by his will proved in 1670, devised the Three
Mills to his daughter Anne, later wife of Sir Peter
Anstey. (fn. 113) She left no issue, and the property passed
in succession to Peter and Katherine, Sir Peter's
children by a later marriage. Katherine married Allen
Bathurst (d. 1775), Lord (later Earl) Bathurst, and
in 1727 they sold the mills to Peter Lefevre (or Lefebure), who in partnership with others built up a
large distilling business there. (fn. 114) The later history
of the Three Mills was fully described in print in
1957. (fn. 115) The mills were then owned and occupied
by J. & W. Nicholson, gin distillers, who had bought
them in 1872, but distilling had ceased in 1941. In
1966 the mill was sold to the Greater London
council, which leased part of the premises to Three
Mills Bonded Warehouses Ltd., a company partly
owned by J. & W. Nicholson. (fn. 116) The oldest surviving
buildings are the House Mill (1776) and the Clock
Mill (1817), in both of which some of the old waterpowered machinery still remains. (fn. 117) A windmill,
south of the main buildings, was first mentioned
in 1734, and survived until about 1840. Other
buildings were destroyed by fires in 1908 and 1920,
and by bombing during the Second World War.
The Pigeons Mill, Stratford Green, was a smock
windmill south of Romford Road, near the Pigeons
public house. (fn. 118) There was apparently a pair of mills
there in 1744–6, but only one in 1777. (fn. 119) By 1860
the Pigeons Mill was derelict and the ownership
unknown. It appears to have been demolished by
the local board late in that year. (fn. 120) This mill may be
identical with the Oten Mill, mentioned in 1602. (fn. 121)
Nobshill Mill was a windmill on Pudding Mill
river, a few yards from the main channel of the river
Lea. It existed in 1867, but had disappeared by 1894. (fn. 122)