. . . . AND THOSE AROUND TRING
CHAPTER XI.
QUAINTON
TOWER
MILL
Fig. 11.1: Quainton tower
mill from Simber Hill
The great tower mill at Wendover has an air of power and majesty
about it,
whereas that at Quainton
excels in elegance and good looks. Its slender, gently tapered
body stands over 70 feet
tall, making it, so its keepers claim, the tallest windmill in
Buckinghamshire — however, when compared with the six
floors and massive cap of Wendover
Mill, there can’t be much in it. As a landmark, Quainton
Mill stands proud and prominent and, when driven, it is
sheer delight to see its slowly-revolving sails play flitting change
with sun and shade. But despite its modern
construction, as a windmill Quainton was not a great success
commercially due mainly to its poor position some 250 feet beneath
the peak of Simber hill, which stands immediately behind it:
“The one great mistake with Quainton Mill
was to put it at the foot of the hill instead of on top — 350ft above the Ordnance datum with a 600 ft summit just behind it.
The east winds were cut off by the hill, the north winds by the
trees, whilst the west winds were deflected by the recoil off the
hill and the south winds were broken by the trees and houses; so the
mill — a masterpiece of the millwright’s art — never did much good .
. . .”
Unpublished manuscript
(1939) by Stanley Freece,
Centre
for Buckinghamshire Studies.
Referring to the nearby Curtis’s
Mill, a renovated post mill, Stanley Freece was told that:
“She was a nice
little fast-running mill, she would always go, even when the giant tower
mill refused to start.”
Unpublished manuscript
(1939) by Stanley Freece,
Centre
for Buckinghamshire Studies.
. . . . the giant tower mill being Quainton.
Fig. 11.2: some of the locally
made bricks
Built by James Anstiss, construction began in 1830, but when the
tower had reached what became the third floor, work ceased and a
temporary thatched roof protected the structure while Anstiss went
to America. On his return, work continued and was completed in 1832.
To celebrate the event, James Dubney, one of his workmen, is said to
have climbed the mills highest sail to celebrate the event by
drinking to its success, not realising that the brake was not on —
fortunately for him the sails did not turn.
The mill was
built from hand-made bricks, the clay for which was taken from a
nearby pit, moulded, and burnt on site. The tower was constructed from the inside along the lines of an
industrial chimney of the era, no external scaffolding being necessary.
The tower has six floors plus the cap, its two pairs of under-driven stones
being on the fourth. The machinery, much of which is iron, was installed by
the millwright
William Cooper of Aylesbury, who shortly after
the mill’s
completion was declared bankrupt (and disappeared from the scene).
Thus, in place of
the great timber post seen in local post mills and in the smock mill
at Lacey Green, the upright shaft
at Quainton is a slender iron pole, some 8 inches in diameter. The
arrangements for rotating the cap are the same as those at Wendover,
the cap being mounted on iron rollers which run upon an iron
curb, forming, in effect, a roller bearing. |