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River Bourne, Kent

The River Bourne rises in the parish of Ightham, Kent and flows in a generally south easterly direction through the parishes of Borough Green, Platt, Plaxtol, West Peckham, Hadlow, and East Peckham where it joins the River Medway. In the 18th century the river was known as the Busty or Buster, the Shode or Sheet, but is not known by these names nowadays. A bourne is a type of stream, while shode means a branch of a river.[1]

River Bourne
The River Bourne enters the Medway
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationIghtham.

TQ 597 567
 • coordinates51°17′13″N 0°17′28″E / 51.2869°N 0.2911°E / 51.2869; 0.2911
 • elevation249 feet (76 m)
Mouth 
 • location
River Medway, East Peckham.

TQ 664 477
 • coordinates
51°12′15″N 0°22′59″E / 51.2042°N 0.3830°E / 51.2042; 0.3830
 • elevation
42 feet (13 m)
Length10-mile (16 km)
Rivers of Kent
River Bourne mills
River Bourne
Old Mill
Crouch Mill
Basted Mill
Lower Basted Mill
Winfield Mill
Longmill
Roughway Paper Mill
Hamptons Mill
Uridge's Mill
Fairlawne Sawmill
Claygate Pump
Oxonhoath Mill
Bourne Mill
Goldhill Mill
Pierce Mill
Little Mill
River Medway

Geography edit

 
The river emerges from a culvert, and flows along Busty Lane, Ightham.

Several springs feed into the headwaters of the River Bourne and there are three contenders for its actual main source. It could be a spring on the North Downs at New House Farm, Yaldham, though the Environment Agency prefers a spring to the west of Oldbury Hill. It could be a spring on Oldbury Hill which feeds the Waterflash, a tree-ringed pond, which drains to the north of the hill. Oldbury Hill is on the Greensand Ridge. These merge in Ightham where the Bourne has cut a 117 feet (36 m) deep gorge through the limestone. In 1891 ice age relics were found near here in a quarry. The river passes through woods to Basted, where a mill pond gives clues to its industrial past. From Ightham through Hadlow to Golden Green, the river powered numerous watermills. Road names are full of mill references. The principal products were flour and paper. The area of the Medway Valley near East Peckham is prone to flooding and the River Bourne contributes much water, so is regularly monitored and dredged to ensure an uninterrupted water flow. There is a gauging station at Hadlow (TQ 632 497 51°13′23″N 0°20′17″E / 51.223052°N 0.338094°E / 51.223052; 0.338094).[2][3][4][5]

Watermills edit

The River Bourne was used to power a number of watermills in its 10-mile (16 km) length. In order from source these were: Old Mill, Borough Green (corn?); Basted Mill (Platt parish) (paper); Lower Basted Mill, Plaxtol (corn?); Winfield Mill, (corn); Longmill (corn); Roughway Paper Mill; Hamptons Paper Mill (West Peckham parish); Oxonhoath Mill (corn); Bourne Mill (corn), Hadlow; Goldhill Mill (corn), Golden Green; Pierce Mill (corn); and finally Little Mill (corn), East Peckham.

Old Mill, Borough Green edit

TQ 606 565 51°17′06″N 0°18′14″E / 51.2849°N 0.3039°E / 51.2849; 0.3039

Little is known of it except that the millpond was about 75 yards (68.58 m) long and 25 feet (7.62 m) wide at the mill, giving an area of up to 625 square yards (523 m2). The head was about 6 feet (1.83 m).[6]

Basted Paper Mill, Platt edit

TQ 607 557 51°16′40″N 0°18′18″E / 51.2777°N 0.3050°E / 51.2777; 0.3050

 
Basted Mill Pond

This paper mill was marked on Hasted's map and known to be in operation in 1716. It may be the paper mill at Wrotham which William Quelch was working in the period 1723–31.[7] The mill pond was 175 yards (160.02 m) long and 75 feet (22.86 m) wide at the mill, giving an area of 4,375 square yards (3,658 m2). George How Green was the occupier of the mill in 1835 when he leased Hamptons Paper Mill. The mill burnt down in 1917 and was rebuilt and worked by steam power until 1960. It finally closed after damage suffered in the floods of September 1968. The mill supplied paper used for postage stamps. Although often referred to as being in Borough Green, the mill site actually stands within the parish of Platt.[1][2][8][9][10]

Lower Basted (Johns) Mill, Plaxtol edit

TQ 605 554 51°16′30″N 0°18′07″E / 51.2750°N 0.3020°E / 51.2750; 0.3020

 
Site of John's Mill

This mill was about 100 yd (91 m) downstream of the Basted Paper Mill. This mill was marked as John's Mill on an 1825 map. The only other evidence for the mill was two fields on the Wrotham tithe map, 1840 named "Mill meadow and orchard" and "Mill meadow and old road" in the ownership of H A Wildes and the occupation of John Benge.[2][11][12]

Winfield Mill, Plaxtol edit

TQ 607 551 51°16′20″N 0°18′17″E / 51.2723°N 0.3047°E / 51.2723; 0.3047

 
Winfield Mill c1940

Winfield mill was a corn mill built of ragstone in 1836 by Eliza Carter. Millers include James Full, who died 18 March 1871 aged 66, and was buried in Plaxtol churchyard. The mill was still standing in 1940, but by 1950 it was a ruin. The Upright Shaft was of wood and the Great Spur Wheel was of compass arm construction, as shown on a photograph of 1955. The overshot waterwheel was 11 feet (3.35 m) in diameter and 12 feet (3.66 m) wide, housed internally in the mill, and was constructed in 1874 by Messrs. Weeks of Maidstone. Some stones still remain at the site.

An earlier mill on this site was known as "Windfield Mille" in 1699 and was then in the occupation of John Dutnell; it was previously in the occupation of Thomas Farrett.[2][10][13][14][15][16]

Longmill, Plaxtol edit

TQ 614 536 51°15′31″N 0°18′51″E / 51.2586°N 0.3141°E / 51.2586; 0.3141

A long-lost corn mill site, commemorated today by Longmill Lane.

Roughway Paper Mill, Plaxtol edit

TQ 615 528 51°15′05″N 0°18′55″E / 51.2514°N 0.3152°E / 51.2514; 0.3152

 
Roughway Paper Mill, 1904.

This mill was built c.1807 and was powered by steam and water. The mills were worked by Messrs, Turner & Co from at least 1862 to post 1882 and produced paper which Messrs. De La Rue used for printing colonial postage stamps. Latterly a 9 feet (2.74 m) diameter by 4 feet (1.22 m) wide breastshot waterwheel was used to drive bellows for the steam engine. There was a tall chimney which was a local landmark but this was demolished in 1997 after a fire.[10][17]

Hamptons Paper Mill, West Peckham edit

TQ 617 521 51°14′42″N 0°19′04″E / 51.2450°N 0.3177°E / 51.2450; 0.3177

 
Old Mill Cottages, Hamptons Road

This paper mill was built in 1740 by Thomas West, carpenter, of West Peckham for William Burtenshaw, papermaker, of Wrotham for £175 and was active until the 1880s. When built it was 75 feet (22.86 m) long and 24 feet (7.32 m) wide. In 1759 the mill was leased by Isabella and William Dalyson to Mrs Elizabeth Buttonshaw for 21 years at £45 per annum. Previous occupiers of the mill were William Steddolph and Thomas Dalison. John Buttonshaw died on 12 February 1827 and the lease then passed to Elizabeth Buttonshaw. In 1835 John Buttanshaw surrendered his lease on the mill to Maximilian Dudley Digges Dalison. George How Green leasing the mill from 1833 at £100 per annum, and insuring the mill and building for a total of £1,500.

Only traces of the foundations remain. It probably had an overshot waterwheel, housed internally. A paper-making machine was sold from this mill in 1872 . The mill straddled the parish boundary of Shipbourne and West Peckham. It was demolished c.1890. The mill cottages survive on the opposite side of the road to the mill site.[10][13][18]

Oxonhoath Mill, West Peckham edit

TQ 621 515 51°14′22″N 0°19′24″E / 51.2395°N 0.3232°E / 51.2395; 0.3232

The site has been occupied since 1259. It may be the site of "Toyesmede mill" lying in the Hadlow boundary of the Lowy of Tonbridge in c.1258. The mill has at various times been a fulling mill and a corn mill. The mill was at one time owned by the Geary family and worked by William Young and his son Edward in the period 1847–75. Robert Blunden was the miller in 1882.[19] The mill building was standing in 1930 although the machinery had been removed by then. It had a single storey brick base and three storeys built of timber on top. Only a part of the lower walls remain today.[2][10]

Bourne (Hope, Lambert's) Mill, Hadlow edit

TQ 627 503 51°13′43″N 0°19′52″E / 51.2286°N 0.3312°E / 51.2286; 0.3312

 
Bourne Mill, Hadlow

This may be a Domesday site, Haslow (Hadlow) being assessed as having 2 mills. The mill still stands, and had a large external high breast shot waterwheel. The millpond was about 15 yards (14 m) by 30 yards (27 m), or 450 square yards (380 m2) in area. Apart from the cast iron wheel axle and wooden upright shaft, The cast iron pit wheel survives. The crown wheel was of compass arm construction. The mill was working until 1947, millers in the latter days being John Thirsk (there in 1931) and Thomas Lambert before him. A Mr. Carr took over the mill in 1947 and established a small clothing factory, still trading today as Carr & Westley Ltd. The mill was also known as Hope Mill, being part of Hope Farm.[2][10]

Goldhill (Bourneside, Victoria) Mill, Golden Green edit

TQ 636 484 51°12′41″N 0°20′36″E / 51.2113°N 0.3432°E / 51.2113; 0.3432

 
Goldhill Mill

Golden Green is a hamlet within Hadlow parish. A mill may have been on this site since Domesday. This Grade II listed[20] mill is the only mill on the Bourne to retain most of its milling machinery. The internal waterwheel is of iron, and is breast shot. It is 14 feet (4.27 m) diameter and 7 feet (2.13 m) wide. on a cast iron axle. The pit wheel is 10 feet (3.05 m) diameter and has 120 cogs, driving a 2 feet 6 inches (760 mm) diameter wallower with 35 teeth on a 17 inches (430 mm) diameter wooden upright shaft. The Great Spur Wheel is 6 feet 8 inches (2.03 m) diameter and has 92 cogs. The date 1848 is on a plinth at the bottom of the Upright shaft, and may indicate the date of the existing waterwheel and machinery. The crown wheel was used latterly to drive the electricity generator, with one of the stone nuts being adapted as the driven gear. The mill had two pairs of millstones and last ground corn c.1920. The sack hoist does not survive. In the early-mid 20th century, the mill was used to generate electricity, but the apparatus has now been removed. The mill was also known as Bourneside Mill and Victoria Mill (Victoria Road is downstream of the mill). The outbuildings around the mill have been converted into holiday cottages.[2][10][21]

Pierce Mill, Golden Green edit

TQ 646 484 approx 51°12′40″N 0°21′27″E / 51.2110°N 0.3575°E / 51.2110; 0.3575

Little is known of this mill, but it is commemorated today by Pierce Mill Lane. The mill was named after the millers, the Pierce family.

Little Mill, East Peckham edit

TQ 657 482 51°12′32″N 0°22′24″E / 51.2089°N 0.3732°E / 51.2089; 0.3732

 
On the left are the gardens of the Man of Kent Pub, to the right the site of Little Mill
 
The 16th century Man of Kent public house, on the opposite bank to Little Mill.

This mill still stands, part of the building now being house converted, part demolished. The waterwheel was breastshot.[10]

Tributaries edit

A tributary of the Bourne rises in the Hildenborough parish and flows through Shipbourne where it powered a watermill, Uridge's Mill, Shipbourne (corn) and a pump at Claygate before flowing into the Bourne downstream of Hamptons Paper Mill.

A tributary of this tributary drove a water powered sawmill at Fairlawne Home Farm, Shipbourne.

A tributary enters the Bourne at Basted Paper Mills. It may have powered a watermill in Crouch (Platt parish).

Mills on the tributaries edit

Uridge's Mill, Shipbourne edit

This mill was named after the miller, Robert Uridge, who worked the mill for sixteen years during the 1870s and 1880s. The exact location is not known. The mill may have gone by the name Puttenden Mill, but this could also have been Hamptons Paper Mill.[22]

Claygate pump, Shipbourne edit

TQ 605 517 approx 51°14′30″N 0°18′01″E / 51.241789°N 0.300355°E / 51.241789; 0.300355

This was a breast shot wheel driving a pump again the exact location is not known.[23]

Fairlawne Saw Mill, Plaxtol edit

An estate saw mill, driven by a breast shot mill was located at Fairlawne Home Farm.[23]

Crouch Mill, Platt edit

There may have been a watermill at Salmons Farm, Crouch. The only reference to it being the Wrotham Tithe Award of 1845 noting a hop garden of 2 acres (8,100 m2) and 35 perches "adjoining mill."[13]

Wildlife edit

Chubb can be seen in the river at Little Mill, and Crayfish can be found at Ightham. Brown trout can be seen at Goldhill Mill, Golden Green.[24][25][26]

Navigation edit

 
open water navigation 2014
 
navigation blocked after 200 m by vegetation, summer 2014

The Bourne was navigable from The Medway, by canoe, summer 2014, in open water, for 200 m until clogged by vegetation under the 1st footpath bridge; 500 m before the 'Man of Kent' pub, East Peckham.

The river was reported navigable to the pub in winter (2012); 'the last 100 yards rocky and difficult'.[27]

The lack of mills for the 800 m below Little Mill (now 'Man of Kent') may indicate that loads could once be carried to the Tonbridge Road at East Peckham. A large tannery, using the Bourne's water at Little Mill, is shown in the 1891 OS map. The river by the tannery, before the road bridge, is shown with a cut-out suited to mooring.[28]

Footpaths edit

The River Bourne is crossed by the Greensand Way long-distance path at Dunk's Green and the Wealdway long-distance path at Barnes Street. The Medway Valley Walk at Waggon Bridge, East Peckham marks the spot where the Bourne enters the Medway. Hadlow Parish Council have plotted a walk along the Bourne, from Ightham to the Medway.

The Ancient track, Pilgrims' Way passes through Yaldham. The Roman military route from Maidstone to London crosses the Bourne at Ightham.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Coles Finch, William (1933). Watermills & Windmills. London WC1: C W Daniel Company. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Hadlow Parish site accessed 21 November 2007 October 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ East Peckham Flood Group 2007-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 October 2007. Retrieved 16 December 2007.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 October 2007. Retrieved 16 December 2007.
  6. ^ Fuller & Spain (1986). Watermills (Kent and the Borders of Sussex). Maidstone: Kent Archaeological Society. p. 108. ISBN 0-906746-08-6..
  7. ^ Mills Archive 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ easily.co.uk 2008-10-01 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Stamps4u in New Zealand accessed 21 November 2007
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Reid, Kenneth (1987). Watermills of the London Countryside, Vol 1. Cheddar, Somerset, UK: Charles Skilton Ltd. pp. 128–29. ISBN 0-284-39165-4.
  11. ^ /maps at Kent Archaeology accessed 22 November 2007
  12. ^ Fuller & Spain (1986). Watermills (Kent and the Borders of Sussex). Maidstone: Kent Archaeological Society. pp. 20–21. ISBN 0-906746-08-6.
  13. ^ a b c Kent Archaeology
  14. ^ Kent Library
  15. ^ Mill Archive[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Fuller & Spain (1986). Watermills (Kent and the Borders of Sussex). Maidstone: Kent Archaeological Society. pp. 138–39. ISBN 0-906746-08-6.
  17. ^ rpal.org.uk 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ GHatfield 2006-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Whyman, John (1983). Hadlow 100 years ago. Hadlow: Hadlow Historical Society. p. 6. ISBN.
  20. ^ "GOLDHILL MILL, THREE ELM LANE, HADLOW, TONBRIDGE AND MALLING, KENT". English Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  21. ^ Goldhill Cottages
  22. ^ Kent & Sussex Courier, 20 February 1981, p2.
  23. ^ a b MillArchive.com 2010-11-25 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2007.
  25. ^ Crayfish Traps[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ Mills Archive 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ songofthepaddle.co.uk
  28. ^ old-maps.co.uk 2012-04-30 at the Wayback Machine

See also edit

river, bourne, kent, explanation, various, pieces, machinery, mentioned, mill, machinery, river, bourne, rises, parish, ightham, kent, flows, generally, south, easterly, direction, through, parishes, borough, green, platt, plaxtol, west, peckham, hadlow, east,. For an explanation of the various pieces of machinery mentioned see Mill machinery The River Bourne rises in the parish of Ightham Kent and flows in a generally south easterly direction through the parishes of Borough Green Platt Plaxtol West Peckham Hadlow and East Peckham where it joins the River Medway In the 18th century the river was known as the Busty or Buster the Shode or Sheet but is not known by these names nowadays A bourne is a type of stream while shode means a branch of a river 1 River BourneThe River Bourne enters the MedwayPhysical characteristicsSource locationIghtham TQ 597 567 coordinates51 17 13 N 0 17 28 E 51 2869 N 0 2911 E 51 2869 0 2911 elevation249 feet 76 m Mouth locationRiver Medway East Peckham TQ 664 477 coordinates51 12 15 N 0 22 59 E 51 2042 N 0 3830 E 51 2042 0 3830 elevation42 feet 13 m Length10 mile 16 km Rivers of Kent vteRiver Bourne mills Legend River Bourne Old Mill Crouch Mill Basted Mill Lower Basted Mill Winfield Mill Longmill Roughway Paper Mill Hamptons Mill Uridge s Mill Fairlawne Sawmill Claygate Pump Oxonhoath Mill Bourne Mill Goldhill Mill Pierce Mill Little Mill River Medway Contents 1 Geography 2 Watermills 2 1 Old Mill Borough Green 2 2 Basted Paper Mill Platt 2 3 Lower Basted Johns Mill Plaxtol 2 4 Winfield Mill Plaxtol 2 5 Longmill Plaxtol 2 6 Roughway Paper Mill Plaxtol 2 7 Hamptons Paper Mill West Peckham 2 8 Oxonhoath Mill West Peckham 2 9 Bourne Hope Lambert s Mill Hadlow 2 10 Goldhill Bourneside Victoria Mill Golden Green 2 11 Pierce Mill Golden Green 2 12 Little Mill East Peckham 3 Tributaries 4 Mills on the tributaries 4 1 Uridge s Mill Shipbourne 4 2 Claygate pump Shipbourne 4 3 Fairlawne Saw Mill Plaxtol 4 4 Crouch Mill Platt 5 Wildlife 6 Navigation 7 Footpaths 8 References 9 See alsoGeography edit nbsp The river emerges from a culvert and flows along Busty Lane Ightham Several springs feed into the headwaters of the River Bourne and there are three contenders for its actual main source It could be a spring on the North Downs at New House Farm Yaldham though the Environment Agency prefers a spring to the west of Oldbury Hill It could be a spring on Oldbury Hill which feeds the Waterflash a tree ringed pond which drains to the north of the hill Oldbury Hill is on the Greensand Ridge These merge in Ightham where the Bourne has cut a 117 feet 36 m deep gorge through the limestone In 1891 ice age relics were found near here in a quarry The river passes through woods to Basted where a mill pond gives clues to its industrial past From Ightham through Hadlow to Golden Green the river powered numerous watermills Road names are full of mill references The principal products were flour and paper The area of the Medway Valley near East Peckham is prone to flooding and the River Bourne contributes much water so is regularly monitored and dredged to ensure an uninterrupted water flow There is a gauging station at Hadlow TQ 632 497 51 13 23 N 0 20 17 E 51 223052 N 0 338094 E 51 223052 0 338094 2 3 4 5 Watermills editThe River Bourne was used to power a number of watermills in its 10 mile 16 km length In order from source these were Old Mill Borough Green corn Basted Mill Platt parish paper Lower Basted Mill Plaxtol corn Winfield Mill corn Longmill corn Roughway Paper Mill Hamptons Paper Mill West Peckham parish Oxonhoath Mill corn Bourne Mill corn Hadlow Goldhill Mill corn Golden Green Pierce Mill corn and finally Little Mill corn East Peckham Old Mill Borough Green edit TQ 606 565 51 17 06 N 0 18 14 E 51 2849 N 0 3039 E 51 2849 0 3039Little is known of it except that the millpond was about 75 yards 68 58 m long and 25 feet 7 62 m wide at the mill giving an area of up to 625 square yards 523 m2 The head was about 6 feet 1 83 m 6 Basted Paper Mill Platt edit TQ 607 557 51 16 40 N 0 18 18 E 51 2777 N 0 3050 E 51 2777 0 3050 nbsp Basted Mill Pond This paper mill was marked on Hasted s map and known to be in operation in 1716 It may be the paper mill at Wrotham which William Quelch was working in the period 1723 31 7 The mill pond was 175 yards 160 02 m long and 75 feet 22 86 m wide at the mill giving an area of 4 375 square yards 3 658 m2 George How Green was the occupier of the mill in 1835 when he leased Hamptons Paper Mill The mill burnt down in 1917 and was rebuilt and worked by steam power until 1960 It finally closed after damage suffered in the floods of September 1968 The mill supplied paper used for postage stamps Although often referred to as being in Borough Green the mill site actually stands within the parish of Platt 1 2 8 9 10 Lower Basted Johns Mill Plaxtol edit TQ 605 554 51 16 30 N 0 18 07 E 51 2750 N 0 3020 E 51 2750 0 3020 nbsp Site of John s Mill This mill was about 100 yd 91 m downstream of the Basted Paper Mill This mill was marked as John s Mill on an 1825 map The only other evidence for the mill was two fields on the Wrotham tithe map 1840 named Mill meadow and orchard and Mill meadow and old road in the ownership of H A Wildes and the occupation of John Benge 2 11 12 Winfield Mill Plaxtol edit TQ 607 551 51 16 20 N 0 18 17 E 51 2723 N 0 3047 E 51 2723 0 3047 nbsp Winfield Mill c1940Winfield mill was a corn mill built of ragstone in 1836 by Eliza Carter Millers include James Full who died 18 March 1871 aged 66 and was buried in Plaxtol churchyard The mill was still standing in 1940 but by 1950 it was a ruin The Upright Shaft was of wood and the Great Spur Wheel was of compass arm construction as shown on a photograph of 1955 The overshot waterwheel was 11 feet 3 35 m in diameter and 12 feet 3 66 m wide housed internally in the mill and was constructed in 1874 by Messrs Weeks of Maidstone Some stones still remain at the site An earlier mill on this site was known as Windfield Mille in 1699 and was then in the occupation of John Dutnell it was previously in the occupation of Thomas Farrett 2 10 13 14 15 16 Longmill Plaxtol edit TQ 614 536 51 15 31 N 0 18 51 E 51 2586 N 0 3141 E 51 2586 0 3141A long lost corn mill site commemorated today by Longmill Lane Roughway Paper Mill Plaxtol edit TQ 615 528 51 15 05 N 0 18 55 E 51 2514 N 0 3152 E 51 2514 0 3152 nbsp Roughway Paper Mill 1904 This mill was built c 1807 and was powered by steam and water The mills were worked by Messrs Turner amp Co from at least 1862 to post 1882 and produced paper which Messrs De La Rue used for printing colonial postage stamps Latterly a 9 feet 2 74 m diameter by 4 feet 1 22 m wide breastshot waterwheel was used to drive bellows for the steam engine There was a tall chimney which was a local landmark but this was demolished in 1997 after a fire 10 17 Hamptons Paper Mill West Peckham edit TQ 617 521 51 14 42 N 0 19 04 E 51 2450 N 0 3177 E 51 2450 0 3177 nbsp Old Mill Cottages Hamptons Road This paper mill was built in 1740 by Thomas West carpenter of West Peckham for William Burtenshaw papermaker of Wrotham for 175 and was active until the 1880s When built it was 75 feet 22 86 m long and 24 feet 7 32 m wide In 1759 the mill was leased by Isabella and William Dalyson to Mrs Elizabeth Buttonshaw for 21 years at 45 per annum Previous occupiers of the mill were William Steddolph and Thomas Dalison John Buttonshaw died on 12 February 1827 and the lease then passed to Elizabeth Buttonshaw In 1835 John Buttanshaw surrendered his lease on the mill to Maximilian Dudley Digges Dalison George How Green leasing the mill from 1833 at 100 per annum and insuring the mill and building for a total of 1 500 Only traces of the foundations remain It probably had an overshot waterwheel housed internally A paper making machine was sold from this mill in 1872 The mill straddled the parish boundary of Shipbourne and West Peckham It was demolished c 1890 The mill cottages survive on the opposite side of the road to the mill site 10 13 18 Oxonhoath Mill West Peckham edit TQ 621 515 51 14 22 N 0 19 24 E 51 2395 N 0 3232 E 51 2395 0 3232The site has been occupied since 1259 It may be the site of Toyesmede mill lying in the Hadlow boundary of the Lowy of Tonbridge in c 1258 The mill has at various times been a fulling mill and a corn mill The mill was at one time owned by the Geary family and worked by William Young and his son Edward in the period 1847 75 Robert Blunden was the miller in 1882 19 The mill building was standing in 1930 although the machinery had been removed by then It had a single storey brick base and three storeys built of timber on top Only a part of the lower walls remain today 2 10 Bourne Hope Lambert s Mill Hadlow edit TQ 627 503 51 13 43 N 0 19 52 E 51 2286 N 0 3312 E 51 2286 0 3312 nbsp Bourne Mill Hadlow This may be a Domesday site Haslow Hadlow being assessed as having 2 mills The mill still stands and had a large external high breast shot waterwheel The millpond was about 15 yards 14 m by 30 yards 27 m or 450 square yards 380 m2 in area Apart from the cast iron wheel axle and wooden upright shaft The cast iron pit wheel survives The crown wheel was of compass arm construction The mill was working until 1947 millers in the latter days being John Thirsk there in 1931 and Thomas Lambert before him A Mr Carr took over the mill in 1947 and established a small clothing factory still trading today as Carr amp Westley Ltd The mill was also known as Hope Mill being part of Hope Farm 2 10 Goldhill Bourneside Victoria Mill Golden Green edit TQ 636 484 51 12 41 N 0 20 36 E 51 2113 N 0 3432 E 51 2113 0 3432 nbsp Goldhill MillGolden Green is a hamlet within Hadlow parish A mill may have been on this site since Domesday This Grade II listed 20 mill is the only mill on the Bourne to retain most of its milling machinery The internal waterwheel is of iron and is breast shot It is 14 feet 4 27 m diameter and 7 feet 2 13 m wide on a cast iron axle The pit wheel is 10 feet 3 05 m diameter and has 120 cogs driving a 2 feet 6 inches 760 mm diameter wallower with 35 teeth on a 17 inches 430 mm diameter wooden upright shaft The Great Spur Wheel is 6 feet 8 inches 2 03 m diameter and has 92 cogs The date 1848 is on a plinth at the bottom of the Upright shaft and may indicate the date of the existing waterwheel and machinery The crown wheel was used latterly to drive the electricity generator with one of the stone nuts being adapted as the driven gear The mill had two pairs of millstones and last ground corn c 1920 The sack hoist does not survive In the early mid 20th century the mill was used to generate electricity but the apparatus has now been removed The mill was also known as Bourneside Mill and Victoria Mill Victoria Road is downstream of the mill The outbuildings around the mill have been converted into holiday cottages 2 10 21 Pierce Mill Golden Green edit TQ 646 484 approx 51 12 40 N 0 21 27 E 51 2110 N 0 3575 E 51 2110 0 3575Little is known of this mill but it is commemorated today by Pierce Mill Lane The mill was named after the millers the Pierce family Little Mill East Peckham edit TQ 657 482 51 12 32 N 0 22 24 E 51 2089 N 0 3732 E 51 2089 0 3732 nbsp On the left are the gardens of the Man of Kent Pub to the right the site of Little Mill nbsp The 16th century Man of Kent public house on the opposite bank to Little Mill This mill still stands part of the building now being house converted part demolished The waterwheel was breastshot 10 Tributaries editA tributary of the Bourne rises in the Hildenborough parish and flows through Shipbourne where it powered a watermill Uridge s Mill Shipbourne corn and a pump at Claygate before flowing into the Bourne downstream of Hamptons Paper Mill A tributary of this tributary drove a water powered sawmill at Fairlawne Home Farm Shipbourne A tributary enters the Bourne at Basted Paper Mills It may have powered a watermill in Crouch Platt parish Mills on the tributaries editUridge s Mill Shipbourne edit This mill was named after the miller Robert Uridge who worked the mill for sixteen years during the 1870s and 1880s The exact location is not known The mill may have gone by the name Puttenden Mill but this could also have been Hamptons Paper Mill 22 Claygate pump Shipbourne edit TQ 605 517 approx 51 14 30 N 0 18 01 E 51 241789 N 0 300355 E 51 241789 0 300355This was a breast shot wheel driving a pump again the exact location is not known 23 Fairlawne Saw Mill Plaxtol edit An estate saw mill driven by a breast shot mill was located at Fairlawne Home Farm 23 Crouch Mill Platt edit There may have been a watermill at Salmons Farm Crouch The only reference to it being the Wrotham Tithe Award of 1845 noting a hop garden of 2 acres 8 100 m2 and 35 perches adjoining mill 13 Wildlife editChubb can be seen in the river at Little Mill and Crayfish can be found at Ightham Brown trout can be seen at Goldhill Mill Golden Green 24 25 26 Navigation edit nbsp open water navigation 2014 nbsp navigation blocked after 200 m by vegetation summer 2014 The Bourne was navigable from The Medway by canoe summer 2014 in open water for 200 m until clogged by vegetation under the 1st footpath bridge 500 m before the Man of Kent pub East Peckham The river was reported navigable to the pub in winter 2012 the last 100 yards rocky and difficult 27 The lack of mills for the 800 m below Little Mill now Man of Kent may indicate that loads could once be carried to the Tonbridge Road at East Peckham A large tannery using the Bourne s water at Little Mill is shown in the 1891 OS map The river by the tannery before the road bridge is shown with a cut out suited to mooring 28 Footpaths editThe River Bourne is crossed by the Greensand Way long distance path at Dunk s Green and the Wealdway long distance path at Barnes Street The Medway Valley Walk at Waggon Bridge East Peckham marks the spot where the Bourne enters the Medway Hadlow Parish Council have plotted a walk along the Bourne from Ightham to the Medway The Ancient track Pilgrims Way passes through Yaldham The Roman military route from Maidstone to London crosses the Bourne at Ightham 2 References edit a b Coles Finch William 1933 Watermills amp Windmills London WC1 C W Daniel Company p 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c d e f g h Hadlow Parish site accessed 21 November 2007 Archived October 23 2007 at the Wayback Machine East Peckham Flood Group Archived 2007 10 13 at the Wayback Machine Environment Agency Archived from the original on 24 October 2007 Retrieved 16 December 2007 Hadlow daily flows Archived from the original on 24 October 2007 Retrieved 16 December 2007 Fuller amp Spain 1986 Watermills Kent and the Borders of Sussex Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society p 108 ISBN 0 906746 08 6 Mills Archive Archived 2009 04 16 at the Wayback Machine easily co uk Archived 2008 10 01 at the Wayback Machine Stamps4u in New Zealand accessed 21 November 2007 a b c d e f g h Reid Kenneth 1987 Watermills of the London Countryside Vol 1 Cheddar Somerset UK Charles Skilton Ltd pp 128 29 ISBN 0 284 39165 4 maps at Kent Archaeology accessed 22 November 2007 Fuller amp Spain 1986 Watermills Kent and the Borders of Sussex Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society pp 20 21 ISBN 0 906746 08 6 a b c Kent Archaeology Kent Library Mill Archive permanent dead link Fuller amp Spain 1986 Watermills Kent and the Borders of Sussex Maidstone Kent Archaeological Society pp 138 39 ISBN 0 906746 08 6 rpal org uk Archived 2009 01 06 at the Wayback Machine GHatfield Archived 2006 10 28 at the Wayback Machine Whyman John 1983 Hadlow 100 years ago Hadlow Hadlow Historical Society p 6 ISBN GOLDHILL MILL THREE ELM LANE HADLOW TONBRIDGE AND MALLING KENT English Heritage Retrieved 23 April 2008 Goldhill Cottages Kent amp Sussex Courier 20 February 1981 p2 a b MillArchive com Archived 2010 11 25 at the Wayback Machine Man of Kent Chubb Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 6 December 2007 Crayfish Traps permanent dead link Mills Archive Archived 2011 07 14 at the Wayback Machine songofthepaddle co uk old maps co uk Archived 2012 04 30 at the Wayback MachineSee also editMedway watermills article nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to River Bourne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title River Bourne Kent amp oldid 1183068996 Old Mill Borough Green, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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