|
North Walsham
Swafield Road postmill |
![]() |
|
c.1962
|
|
North Walsham Swafield Road post windmill stood in a field beside the Mundesley Road on the east side of the town. The mill had a roundhouse |
The mill's main support beams were still standing in a field beside the Mundesley road in the 1960s. |
To be Lett |
To Millers |
To be SOLD by Private Contract |
To be Let With Possession at Old Michaelmas next |
To MERCHANTS, MILLERS, and CAPITALISTS |
To be Premptorily SOLD by AUCTION |
...And also at the King's Arms Inn, North Walsham
On the aforesaid 8th day of September, at Six o'clock in the Evening, Lot 3: - All that capital Dwelling-house, with convenient outbuildings, yard and garden, together with the Water-mill, Cottage, and Granaries adjoining, and about 16 acres of Arable and Meadow Land of the best quality, in the highest state of cultivation. And also a Wind-mill and about two roods and 30 perches of Arable Land. The above Premises are situate in Swafield and North Walsham, and are in full trade, and now in the occupation of Mr. Benjamin Postle Woollsey, as tenant from year to year. The Water_Mill, Cottage, Granaries, and about nine acres of the Land are Leasehold of the Bishop of Norwich, for a term of 21 years, commencing the 10th October, 1827, at an annual rent of 3l. 13s. 4d. The Mill commands a good head of water, and drives two pair of stones and two flour mills. The Dwelling-house, Out-buildings, Yard and Garden, and about five acres, three roods, and 22 perches of the Land are Freehold and pleasantly situated. The Wind-mill, which is in excellent repair, and two roods and 30 perches of Land are Copy-hold of the Manor of North Walsham about half a mile. This Estate offers either a desirable Investment for Money, or a good situation for an active Man of Business, having water carriage to the Port of Yarmouth, is within 16 miles of Norwich, one of North Walsham, and 26 of Yarmouth. And at the same time and place last mentioned, will be Sold by order of the Assignees of the said Bankrupt, A Place of Freehold Arable Land, situate in Swafield, near Swafield Bridge, leading over the North Walsham and Dilham Canal, containing about one acre and one rood, and is well calculated for Warehouses, Granaries, Coal and Timber Yards - Also one Share in the North Walsham and Dilham Canal. Norfolk Chronicle - 13th, 20th & 27th August 1831 |
To be Sold by Auction under a Commission of Bankrupt awarded against John Woollsey and John Secker of Great Yarmouth, wine and spirit merchants, dealers and chapmen, and on the application of the Mortgagees, at the Bear Inn, Bridge Foot, Great Yarmouth, on 8 September. The Watermill and cottages etc. are leasehold of the Bishop of Norwich for a term of 21 years commencing 10 October 1827, at an annual rent of £3-13-4d. The Mill commands a good head of water, and drives two pairs of stones and two flour mills. The Windmill, which is in excellent repair, is copyhold of the Manor of North Walsham. London Gazette - 16th August 1831 |
To Millers, Merchants and others Norfolk Chronicle - 24th September 1831 |
![]() |
Tithe map 1843 - as redrawn by Harry Apling |
Tithe Award 1843 |
||||
No. 987 |
Windmill, Yard & Pightle |
Arable |
0a. 2r. 30p. |
1/4d |
Robert Page married Benjamin Postle Woollsey's daughter Charlotte and took over the mill on the death of Benjamin Woollsey on 1st October 1860 after allegedly having fallen into the lock. In 1858 Robert Page was running Swanton_Abbott_towermill. |
NORTH WALSHAM Norfolk News - Saturday 6th October 1860 |
NOTICE |
H. P. Woollsey, Executrix |
| Norfolk Chronicle - 2nd March 1861 |
SWAFIELD MILLS Norfolk Chronicle - 2nd March 1861 |
![]() |
O.S. map 1888-1890 Image produced from the www.old-maps.co.uk service with permission of Landmark Information Group Ltd. and Ordnance Survey |
![]() |
O.S. Map 1906 - as redrawn by Harry Apling |
The Swafield mills have been sold by auction this week |
In the 18th century, they belonged to the Seckers, that interesting family of Norfolk Quakers, whose most distinguished member was John Secker the seaman (1716-1795). (The transcript of his journal in Norwich Public Library has already been the subject of an article on this page.) John was born in the water-mill at Swafield; his father soon moved to a mill at Buxton_Lamas, but the Swafield mill remained in the family, for John's brother and widowed mother were living there in 1755. The Seckers touched the corn trade at many points - John's cousin, William Palmer, grew corn; Uncle John Sparshall at Southrepps was a maltster and dealer; Cousin Thomas Parson at Wells was the master of a sloop engaged in the export trade; while Cousin Joseph Sparshall, of Wells, found the cargo. The Seckers themselves concentrated on milling; they had mills at Swafield, Buxton and Southrepps. Quaker business enterprises were interlocked, just as Quaker families were, and a high standard of honesty was insisted on by the Meeting, debtors were rebuked, bankrupts expelled. No longer regarded as dangerous religious fanatics, the 18th century Quakers prospered in business; they were industrious, and they were trusted.
At the end of the 18th century the corn business was booming. The population was growing, the standard of life rising, the labouring classes had abandoned the black bread of their forefathers and would eat nothing but wheat flour. Then came the long war with France - nothing could be imported to feed the growing the manufacturing towns. Wheat reached famine prices. The Seckers shared in the boom. In 1768 John Ransome, of North Walsham, had bought a small piece of land and build a windmill on it - a post mill. His neighbour undertook not to plant trees or place any obstruction "so as in any manner to incommode or prevent the wind or air from coming to the piece of land." If he broke the agreement John Ransome could enter his land and remove the obstruction. This is the mill whose remains, just outside North Walsham on the Mundesley road, are so often mistaken for a gibbet. In 1779 Isaac Secker bought this mill, the mill house, and the land that went with it. At that time he was probably working the water-mill in partnership with his father, William Secker; in 1783 William retired, and leased the mill to his son. By then Isaac had built a handsome Georgian front to the mill house (his initials still adorn the side wall). It was a severe and dignified house, as befitted a respectable Quaker, but its size and little elegancies - the pelasters at the corners, a scroll-like curve on the bottom step - show that there was money to spare. Yet the Seckers were still simple people. In 1797 William married again, and his wife, Esther Barber, was illiterate, as were four of the relatives who signed the marriage certificate. Until a few weeks ago Isaac Secker's portrait hung in the old house. It shows a well-set up man, with a long face and a long nose, and a commanding, but slightly anxious, expression. He may well have looked anxious; he had paid out a lot of money between 1779 and 1783; the property was mortgaged, and in 1785 the mortgage was increased. The war-time boom could not last for ever, and in 1831 his grandson John, to whom he had left the mill, was bankrupt. The estate passed to the Seckers' relatives, the Woollseys. The water-mill was worked until about 1912; the post mill was used occasionally up to 1880. But by then the bottom had fallen out of country milling. Huge new steam mills stood at the ports to grind the imported corn on which the country was now fed; the Swafield mills were reduced to grinding feed for stock and selling offal. Now the mills, which have been for the past two centuries at least in the hands of these two related families, have been in the market. The documents on which this account is based were brought to my notice by Mr. Stanley Watts, of North Walsham. Such records are particularly valuable. It is comparatively easy to reconstruct the lives of the gentry in past times, but the equally significant lives of less exalted persons are shrouded in obscurity. We know almost nothing about the rural middle-class who played such an important part in 18th century village life. It may be that there is still more to be discovered about the Secker family. Where are the records of the Swafield Quaker Meeting House? Who has got the Secker family Bible? Where is the original MS of John Secker's journal? I wish I knew. |
In 1962 a series of letters appeared in the Eastern Anglian Magazine concerning the original use of the woodwork with one writer claiming that the mill structure was in fact a double gibbet in the style of Caxton gibbet. The record was eventually put straight by a letter from Harry Apling. |
![]() |
![]() |
East Anglian Magazine - May 1962 |
East Anglian Magazine - July 1962 |
![]() |
|
East Anglian Magazine - September 1962 |
|
![]() |
|
East Anglian Magazine - November 1962 |
|
In 1977 the post was re-erected in Swafield to hold the village sign of a Norfolk Wherry, such as used to bring coal from Great Yarmouth to Swafield Staithe via the North Walsham & Dilham Canal. Harry Apling - c.1980 |
![]() |
O.S. Map 2005 Image reproduced under licence from Ordnance Survey |
Kelly's 1879: John Woollsey, farmer |
1768: John Ransome of North Walsham built the postmill on Quaker Hill
|
If you have any memories, anecdotes or photos please let us know and we may be able to use them to update the site. By all means telephone 01263 587564 or
|
| Nat Grid Ref TG28453160 |
Copyright © Jonathan Neville 2006 |