overshot mill pricelist
RF2C16543–18th century illustration of a watermill. Published in "A Diderot Pictorial Encyclopedia of Trades and Industry. Manufacturing and the Technical Arts
RF2C9CC4M–water mill is a mill that uses hydropower, It is a structure that uses a water wheel or water turbine to drive a mechanical process such as milling, r
RMK9KY9K–1870: The old mill at Tor aka Torre Abbey, near Torquay. It was founded in 1196 as a monastery for Premonstratensian canons, and is now the best-preserved medieval monastery in Devon, England.
RF2C9CE04–Overshot wheel, gives the greatest power with the least quantity of waterand so mainly used when circumstances will permit, or where there is a consid
RMPKG23M–Since 1066, there"s been a water mill at Arundel, a market town in a steep vale of the River Arun of the South Downs, West Sussex, England. Its site was at Swanbourne, north of the town, where an important mill was recorded between 1272 and the mid 19th century. John Home described as miller and baker in 1787 leased Swanbourne mill from the dukes of Norfolk. The mill was depicted by John Constable in his last painting in 1837, when it was a large timber-framed structure, a few years before it was demolished in the early 1840s.
RF2HEJH4E–Blue gear with a drop of water. Cog wheel in a shape of a droplet. Water plant company logo. Hydro energy generation. Water mill power. Vector, flat.
RF2JMH4FW–Fairy tale village set, gnome house, water mill with wooden wheel and well. Vector cartoon illustration of fantasy building, forest stone hut, lantern
RF2JMAEMT–Fairy tale village set, gnome house, water mill with wooden wheel and well. Vector cartoon illustration of fantasy building, forest stone hut, lantern and watermill isolated on white background
RMPKG2A0–There"s been a mill at Welford since the 13th century, for it is named in grants which mention the island in the River Avon near Binton Bridge. The island was said to be between the mills of Binton and Welford. By 1291 there were two mills at Welford and these were named again in 1609, having been granted to William Willington in 1553. The mill was operated until 1958. Welford on Avon, Warwickshire, England.
RMPKG1J1–Grange Mill, Bidford-on-Avon is a large village and civil parish in the English county of Warwickshire. Various Mills dating between the Medieval and Imperial periods are known to have existed here including a watermill, windmill, a fulling mill in 1610 and there was a paper mill at Bidford Grange during the last century, but all the mills here have now disappeared.
RM2ABTXN6–American Marks in Birmingham. VDration near Mill Dams. Improved Water Wheel. pawls G imparts an intermittent motion t BALDWIN"S TURBINE WATER WHEEL. WELLS" AUTOMATIC SAW MILL BLOCKS., scientific american, 1857-08-29
RMTWGJ97–REMAINS OF WATER POWERED MACHINERY USED TO POWER GRIST MILL. NOTE BELT HANGING FROM WOODEN WHEEL IN UPPER RIGHT HAND CORNER OF PHOTOGRAPH. - Plante Grist Mill, U.S. Route 44, Chepachet, Providence County, RI; Plante, Nelson; Burlingame, A; Clement, Dan, photographer
RMTXH1W2–Stamping and roasting ore to extract metal (lead copper, silver and gold treated in this way). Mill powered by water wheel and individual stamps operated by cams on drive shaft From Agricola "De re metallica", Basle, 1556. Woodcut
RMTXGR5W–Undershot water wheel powering a fulling mill. Tappets, C, on shaft, B, raise and lower mallets, D,D, which pound the woollen cloth. From Georg Andreas Bockler "Theatrum Machinarum Novum", Nuremberg, 1673. Copperplate engraving
RF2A4BX6T–Colorful pattern with watermills and windmills on white background. Backdrop with old European wind and water mills. illustration in flat cartoon
RM2ANBBY8–Glen Ridge : the preservation of its natural beauty and its improvement as a place of residence . On HiLLCKEST Road GLEN RIDGE 45 consciousness on the part of the citizens generally ofwhat the Borough life should be, to avoid the over-sights and mistakes of merely drifting, and secure thewell-defined results of a carefully considered programfor the future. John Nolen, Landscape Architects Cambbidge, Mass., November 15, 1909.. Mill Dam and Wheel, Glen Park. A Loss that Could be Restored and A Skating Pond Formed. Few of these Overshot Water Wheels ARE Left in this Country. EAGLE ^CK RESERVATION
RM2ABW9G2–No. 61 Liberty st. New For LUBRICATORS. BOLT cuTTER STEAIK BOILER AND PIPE COVERING LEFFELIMPROVED DOUBLETURBINE WATER WHEEL. SENT FREE °109 LIBERTY ST i NEW YORK CITY. FLOURING MILL near ST. LOUIS MO FOR SALE. MATERIALS.IVIALLEA.BLE IRON. STOVES! [SIGNED FORD &-C2 SEND FOR CIRCU PATENT BAND FOR STEAM DRILLS Patent Movable-Toothed Patent Perforated B. F. STURT"EVANT PRESSURE BLOWERS & EXHAUST FANS ENGINEERS, scientific american, 1872-08-24
RF2A890XE–Colorful pattern with watermills and windmills on white background. Backdrop with old European wind and water mills. illustration in flat cartoon
RM2AXC5H7–Scientific amusements . Archimedian Screw, called after its inventor, was one ofthe earliest modes of raising water. It consists of a cylindersomewhat inclined, and a tube bent like a screw within it. WATER-MIT,!,. 129 By turning the handle of the screw the water is drawn upand flows out from the top. The Water Ram is a machine used for raising water toa great height by means of the momentum of falling water.. ^^f?Sis#i Over-shot wheel of mill. The Hydraulic Lift is familiar to us all, as it acts in ourhotels, and we need only mention these appliances here;full descriptions will be found in Cy
RM2ABWJM3–JOHN RICHARDS & CO. DUC" S ELEVATOR BUCKET RISDON"S IMPROVED TURBINE WATER WHEEL T. II. RISDON & CO. Mt. Holly N. J. Manufacturers of MILL MACHINERY. OTI SAFETY HOISTING Machinery. 8 a Harris" Corliss Engine Win. A. HARRIS Proprietor. PATENT oOLD ROLLED SHAFTING. NEWSPAPER FILE MUNN & CO. WOOD WORKING MACHINERY. MAT MOI" rytOR" Can I Obtain a Patent? confidential? Address MUNN & CO. 37 Park Row New York., scientific american, 1878-12-07
Milford Lane, off the Strand, could well indicate the former existence of a stream which powered a watermill, although there is no way of being certain. The name may equally have come from a windmill (see below).
No study of Middlesex mills would be complete without some mention of the famous waterwheels situated between the arches of London Bridge, which, to my dismay, I had quite forgotten until reminded of them by the late J Kenneth Major. Whether they should be regarded as Middlesex or as Surrey mills might seem a matter for debate, but either the bridge was not thought of as belonging to any particular parish, so that we may as well include the site here, or, and this was the case in the sixteenth century at least, it was split between two, the northern end of the bridge where the wheels were being regarded as falling within St Magnus rather than Southwark(1). The mills were destroyed in the Great Fire in 1666, but subsequently rebuilt.
A watermill was standing on Halliford Manor in 1289(1). There were two newly-built watermills there in 1320(2), which suggests that the original one had gone out of use. It may be that referred to in documents of 1336 and 1343 as old and of little value, although this seems to have stood on the separate manor of Shepperton(3). Another mill, perhaps the successor to one of those mentioned above, was standing in 1805; it survived until well into the nineteenth century and is thought to have given its name to Millbrook House. It stood to the south of the church(4).
The mill mentioned under Hayes in Domesday Book is thought to have been in Norwood(1). The next reference to a watermill in the area occurs in 1578 when one was leased by Robert Chamberlain, the lord of the manor of Norwood(2). In 1596 the executors of Anne, Lady Dacre, reserved for themselves along with the windmill then standing in the manor a watermill and garden in the vicinity(3). There was still a mill in Norwood in 1611(4) and in 1673 an overshot watermill was situated there. A Mr Hamton owned or leased the mill in 1676(5). In 1716 it came into the possession of Sir George Cooke, the future lord of the manor(6), and was offered for sale with the other Cooke properties in 1770(7). It still comprised part of the manorial estate in 1800 (8), when it stood along with a house and other property at Windmill Lane, Dorman’s Well(9). In 1819 a former miller, George Hudd, was registered as bankrupt. In 1821 the mill, house, millpond and land were owned by the Earl of Jersey(10).
From at least 1862 until 1886 the mill was worked by Alfred Robinson, who appears to have been assisted on and off by a relative named Herbert. Shortly after the latter date it went out of use. By the end of the nineteenth century it had been converted into a house called Mill Farm(11). By 1912 it had been renamed Old Greenford mill; although most of the machinery had disappeared the wheelhouse and some of the millstones still remained(12). The mill had gone by 1961 and the site in 1961 was covered by the West Middlesex Golf Course.
Rocque’s map of 1754 shows a mill standing on a small stream running through Osterley Park on the southern boundary of Norwood parish, between Windmill Lane and the stream’s confluence with the Brent. There is no other record of a mill here, and as the overshot mill is not marked it is possible this may be it, placed in the wrong position.
Staines’ position on the river Thames, of which it was a major crossing-point, enabled watermills to flourish there. There were six at the time of Domesday Book, if those in parts of the manor other than Staines itself are included. Later in the Middle Ages there were two in Staines town, each with several sets of machinery, and one at Yeoveney. There are a number of references to mills which cannot be traced, such as the “Hurst Mill” mentioned in 1354(1). Various others are included in conveyances of properties in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and it is not clear whether these represent a third mill or one of the above. In the fifteenth century one of the mills was fitted with a small plant for grinding malt(2). Another seems to have disappeared by 1500.
During its early life the ownership of Hale Mill appears to have been divided; in the reign of Edward I (1272-1307) part belonged to John de la Hale(3), from whom its name is derived, and part was in separate ownership – we do not know whose – from 1271 to 1353(4). After this date the mill belonged to Westminster Abbey. It was derelict and out of use from c1472 to 1490(5); if it was one of the two mills recorded in existence in 1503 and 1694(6) it must have been reconditioned. Since it stood on the River Colne it may well have been that whose occupier claimed to have been injured financially by Henry VIII’s construction of the Duke of Northumberland’s River(7).
As with many other sites it is highly unlikely that the mill standing in the late thirteenth century, and that recorded in 1694 and subsequently, are identical, although the same site may have been used. By 1755 the mill had come into the possession of John Finch, also owner of Pound Mill, whose family were to retain it until the mid-nineteenth century though latterly they did not work it themselves(8). In 1781 John Finch insured the brick-and-tiled mill for £700. By the following year the miller seems to have been a Thomas Finch, presumably a relative, for it was he who took out a new insurance policy to include the adjacent house and offices, the overall cost of the property now rising to £1,080. By 1855 Hale Mill had ceased to produce flour and was in use as a papier-mache factory(9). In 1864 it was taken over by the Linoleum Manufacturing Company who bought it outright in 1871(10).
New Mill, first mentioned in 1388(11), stood just to the east of the now defunct Great Western Railway station, on or near the site of the later Pound Mill. It originally belonged to Westminster Abbey but was later divided among various owners and lessees. In the fifteenth century part of the mill was in use as a fulling mill(12), while in 1472-3 another, or the same, portion had been disused and occupied for eight years, the remainder of the building presumably still being in use, but in 1490 the whole of it was occupied(13). Here is another example of the practice, common in western Middlesex at this time, for two mills within the same building to be in separate ownership and used for different purposes.
Pound Mill, so named after the neighbouring parish pound(14), is first heard of in 1747 when it came into the possession of John Finch, mealman, who eight years later was to add the Hale Mill to his properties(15). It was then said to be newly-erected, although there was a mill on the site in 1682(16), and in 1916 part of the machinery was found to be dated 1712(17). It seems likely therefore that Finch’s mill had been substantially rebuilt, incorporating material from an earlier one. It has been suggested that the latter was the mill listed as among the appurtenances of the manor in a grant of 1610(18), but the Victoria County History (volume 3) believes it could equally have been Hale Mill which also belonged to Westminster Abbey(19). In 1782 the mill, brick-and-tiled like Hale Mill, and its contents were worth £500. In 1793 the mill was worked jointly by Thomas and John Finch and was valued at £1,000. Unlike Hale Mill it continued to be worked for some time by the Finch family. During the nineteenth century its chief business, latterly carried on under the name of Finch, Rickman and Co, was the production of mustard, presumably by crushing the seeds between the millstones, although part of it was still used for grinding corn. In the middle years of the century trade was prosperous, with a considerable number of people being employed at the mill.(20) At this time the owner was Charles Finch, whose grand residence nearby later became the GWR station house. Later the business declined and was sold in 1900. The mill continued to function as one until 1912 and in 1916 was purchased by the Linoleum Manufacturing Company, one-time owners of Hale Mill, who shortly afterwards demolished the upper part of the structure(21).
Contradicting Sanders, Ralph Parsons of Spelthorne Museum informs me that Pound Mill had two waterwheels of twelve foot diameter, one three feet wide and the other four feet. One of the beams in the mill bore the date 16-(22).
A house and two mills in Yeoveney were quitclaimed by William, son of Walter Poyle, to Westminster Abbey in 1258(23). One of these may have been the Yeoveney Mill which belonged to the Abbey in 1275(24). This probably stood on the Wyrardisbury River, for a contemporary document mentions a bridge over against the moor beyond the millpond(25). The manorial accounts show that the mill was often in need of repair, and it seems to have been rebuilt in 1320(26). Subsequently part of it may have been used as a fulling mill(27). It was still in existence in 1636 but seems to have disappeared shortly after this date(28).
The sites of the four watermills recorded at Stanwell in Domesday Book cannot now be established. In the later Middle Ages there were a number of mills which it is likewise impossible to identify, though some may be among those listed below. None of them were under manorial ownership.(1) One of them was held by Richard Peacock, and later his son John, in the fourteenth century, and was still in existence in the early seventeenth by which time it had become known as “Peacock’s Mill”(2). A second mill was acquired in the fifteenth century by Richard Bulstrode(3); in view of the name it may have been identical with that which formed part of an estate belonging to Edward Bulstrode in 1598(4). A new mill appears to have been built sometime in the fourteenth century, and there were at least three in 1606(5). Like others in the area the mills at Poyle and Stanwell were adversely affected by the making of the Duke of Northumberland’s River(6). Another new mill was built later in the seventeenth century(7, possibly on the site of those standing in 1606, and four are recorded in the late eighteenth.
At one time a pound per year was paid to the poor of the parish out of the profits of the local corn mill, according to a list of charges preserved in St Mary the Virgin Church, Stanwell, which is undated but appears to be eighteenth or early nineteenth century. It’s not clear whether the mill in question was wind- or water-powered.
Of all the Stanwell mills this has the longest continuous history. A mill stood on Poyle Manor in the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries(8); it later passed with the Manor to Andrew Windsor, to be alienated by the Crown in 1612 along with his other properties(9). In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries it consisted of two mills under one roof.
By 1636 it was being used in the manufacture of paper and twelve men were employed there(10). In the eighteenth century it came into the tenancy of the Bullock family, who later acquired the freehold(11). The first of the family to work it, Henry Bullock, and his sons used it for the dressing of leather as well as paper making(12). The Bullocks sold the mill in the early nineteenth century(13) and in 1807 it was run by William East and Richard Ibbotson. Ibbotson and his sons later became owners of the property(14). The family used it principally for making paper, but also leather and asbestos board(15), until the partnership between the Ibbotson brothers, Richard, Thomas and Percy, then carrying on the business of paper and millboard manufacturers under the name of P and R Ibbotson, was dissolved in 1850. After 1890 it was used by various owners for purposes including asbestos, fibre, flock, artificial manure and bricks(16). By 1956 the building had been pulled down and its site was occupied by two firms, one the Wilkinsons Sword Company and the other named Graviner, although the weir still remained(17).
In 1385 John Donet was presented for building a mill over a common footpath in Stanwellmoor, and was ordered to remove it(18); but for some reason this illegal mill remained, becoming the ancestor of the building which stands today in Horton Road. In 1472 it passed to Thomas Windsor(19). It is almost certainly the same as that known in the fifteenth century as North Mill and from about 1630 as the Upper Mill. The North Mill was the property of the crown in the sixteenth century and up to 1612, when it was granted to Lord Knyvett(20). From c1610 to 1652 it functioned both as a corn and a paper mill; individuals we know to have been employed in paper-making there are George Hagar from 1682 to 1691 and Eustace Burnley during the eighteenth century. In 1768 John Stevens was miller and the mill and mill house, which communicated with each other (as they do today), were worth £150. The mill was then constructed partly of timber and partly of brick. From 1771 it is referred to as the “New Mill”, probably due to a recent rebuilding.
The mill ceased to produce paper between 1772 and 1793, afterwards functioning entirely as a corn mill until the early twentieth century. At about the same time that the change occurred the lord of the manor sold it; in 1781 it was owned by a Mr Dell and in 1787 Simeon Warner Hagen. The latter was still owner in 1803 but in 1806 the mill was in the possession of John and Samuel Saunders. In 1813 it was advertised in the Reading Mercury to be sold by auction, the notice stating that it had four pairs of stones. Apart from the mill itself and the mill house the premises included a stable. An advert also appeared in the Sussex Weekly Advertiser of 2nd August:
“Stanwell mill, Middlesex – to be sold by auction by Mr Hawkes 9/8/1813 with early possession, by order of the trustees under an Act of Parliament; freehold and tithe-free property, 18ft waterwheel working four pairs of French stones, premises comprising a modern and substantial structure with excellent granaries, lofts, barn, cart lodge, chaise house, commodious dwelling house, yard, 3 fertile enclosures of arable and meadowland adjoining, and productive rates of fishery belonging to the mill.”
In 1832-4 the miller was Henry Carpenter; by 1845 he had been succeeded by James Carpenter Ward, the name indicating a merger through marriage between two families. “J C & H Ward” are listed in an 1862 directory, the “H” probably being Henry Carpenter Ward who worked the mill in 1866 and 1890. William Wooster operated it from 1895 to at least 1917. By 1931 the mill had ceased to produce flour and was instead used in the manufacture of dyes.
The building we see today dates essentially from c1900, when the mill was rebuilt after being severely damaged by fire, although it has been altered on a number of occasions since. It is a fair-sized building of red brick, nicely built but unremarkable in appearance, the wooden lucam being the only distinctive feature. It now houses a chemical company while the mill house, with which it forms an unbroken front, is still occupied.
By 1791 Edmund Hill owned a gunpowder mill at Stanwell about 550 yards south-west of Hithermoor Farm(21); around 1820 it was taken over from his successor by the firm of Curtis and Harvey, of the gunpowder mills at Bedfont and Hounslow, who had already been working it for some years(22). By 1896 it had been converted to a snuff mill, but later became a corn mill, remaining as such until burnt down in 1925(23).
It is not clear whether the Lower Mill was one of the two held by the lords of the manor in the seventeenth century, or was built much later. Documentary evidence proves it was in existence by the late eighteenth century(24). It appears on the 1816 Ordnance Survey, represented by the words “Corn Mill”. Thomas Wheeler was the miller in 1832, but from the mid-nineteenth century until its demolition between c1886 and 1896(25) it was managed by the Carpenter Ward family who operated the Upper Mill a few hundred yards downstream(26). It stood at the weir in Leylands Lane where this crosses the Colne, a few hundred yards downstream from the Upper Mill(27).
A succession of watermills existed at Sunbury between the twelfth century and the twentieth. A mill belonging to Merton Priory, which held Charlton Manor, was standing in 1291(1). The 1722 map of Sunbury Manor shows a field called Mill Acre between the present day Fordbridge Road and The Creek(2). Its western boundary follows roughly the line of the River Ash, making it likely that the mill which stood there was a watermill, probably that which is mentioned in 1591 and 1603(3).
In 1623 100 poor bargemen complained that Sir Thomas Lake had “caused watermilles to be built” at Sunbury “to the great hindrance of a great many poore men which gets their living by the…River.” Their statement ended, “But what cares he or such as he?” The diversion of water to drive the wheels meant that there was not enough of it in the locks to allow the passage of barges. The Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex wrote to the Lord Mayor of London in his capacity as Conservator of the Thames requesting that he suppress the mills.
A watermill was standing in the manor of Kempton, on the Feltham Hill stream, by the sixteenth century. It was rebuilt in or after 1650 by the lord of the manor(4). Under the terms of a lease of Kempton Park by its owner Edmund Hill to William Rolfe in 1803, the former reserved the right of penning up the water in the fish ponds there in order to supply a watermill which was to be erected between the ponds and the River Thames on premises then in the occupation of John Shore, along with that of laying pipes and digging a canal to convey the water to the mill(5).
The mill is known to have stood in Fordbridge Road, where it would have been driven either by the Ash or the Thames, but its exact site has never been established.
RMP09NEM–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMD96HBX–Threshing machine by Andrew Meikle (1719-1811) Scottish inventor and millwright. Top: Original form powered by horses. Bottom: improved form powered by water wheel. Engraving 1811.
RMHTMK15–Threshing machine by Andrew Meikle (1719-1811) Scottish inventor and millwright. Top: Original form powered by horses. Bottom: improved form powered by water wheel. Engraving 1811.
RF2D74G56–Paternoster work with overshot water wheel / Paternosterwerk mit oberschlächtigem Wasserrad, Historisch, historical, digital improved reproduction of an original from the 19th century / digitale Reproduktion einer Originalvorlage aus dem 19. Jahrhundert
RMP09ND9–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMP09NDR–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMP09NDB–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMP09NDW–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMP09NE7–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMP09NDF–. English: Fleuron from book: All sorts of wheel-carriage, improved. Wherein it is plainly made appear, that a much less than the usual draught of horses, &c. will be requir"d, in Waggons, Carts, Coaches, and all other Wheel Vehicles, as likewise all Water-Mills, Wind-Mills and Horse-Mills. This Method being found good in Practice, by the trial of a Coach and Cart already made, shews of what great Advantage it may be to all Farmers, Carriers, Masons, Miners, &c. and to the Publick in general, by saving them one half of the Expences they are now at in the Draught of these Vehicles, according to
RMRG1PF2–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power.. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its proper point. Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery The wm. Hamilton mtq. 60., Ltd. PETERBOROUGH. ONT.. Please note that
RMRG15PD–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power.. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its proper point. Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery The Win. Hamilton Mia. Co.. Ltd. PETERBOROUGH. ONT.. Please note that
RMRG1MDD–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power.. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its proper point. ... Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery The Wm. Hamilton ME Go., Lid. PETERBOROUGH. ONT.. Please note tha
RMRG159Y–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power.. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its proper point. Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery The win. Hamilton Mlo. Co., Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT.. Please note that
RMRG1T1D–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power. m9. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its HHH proper point. Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery The Wm. Hamilton Mto. 60.. Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT.. Please no
RMRG1MWT–. Canadian forest industries 1892-1893. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Improved Water Wheel Governor Most simple, durable, and efficient of any in use. Cor- rects quickly any disturbance of motion of machinery driven by water power.. Any deviation from the correct speed, however slight, affects the action of the governor upon the gate, and it quickly brings the speed up or down to its mmmmi^ proper point. Write for Water Wheel Circulars and Catalogue of Sawmill Machinery PETERBOROUGH, ONT. The wm. Hamilton Mlo. Go., Ltd.. Please not
RM2ABTXN6–American Marks in Birmingham. VDration near Mill Dams. Improved Water Wheel. pawls G imparts an intermittent motion t BALDWIN"S TURBINE WATER WHEEL. WELLS" AUTOMATIC SAW MILL BLOCKS., scientific american, 1857-08-29
RM2AWD62G–Scientific American Volume 20 Number 03 (January 1869) . Factorv, Trenton, N. J Office, No. 2 Jacob st., N. Y. Hr Branch Office for Pacific Coast, No. 606 Front st.,San Francisco, Cal. 1 tf SSES2EHS IT^ROM 4 TO 200-HORSE POWER—y Including CORLISS PATENT CUT-OFF EN-GINES, SLi )F VALVE STATIONARY ENGINES,and PORTABLE ENGINES. Also, IMPROVED CIR-CULAR SAW MILLS, etc.Send for Descriptive Circular and Price List. WOOD & MANN STEAM ENGINE CO., UTICA, N. Y.fiS^* Warerooms 89 Liberty st., New York, and 201 and203 South Water st., Chicago, 111. 21 13eow os B ODINES JONVAL TURBINE WATER Wheel,combining
RM2ABWAWW–Inventions Patented in England by Americans. AMERICAN MANUFACTURES AT VIENNA. WILSON SEWING MACHINE COMPANY. Improved Pen Holder. Improved Farm Fence. Improved Rotary Engine. Improved Signs. Improvement in the Manufacture of Beer and Yeast. Improved Dovetail Machine Improved Ice Cream Freezer. Imprgved Machine for Dressing Millstones. Improved Water Wheel. Improved Tilting Gate. Improved Splice Joint for Railroad Rails Improved Pruning Knife Improved Griudstone Improved Hose Coupling. Improved Car Coupling. Improvement in Attaching Knobs to Spindles. Improved Wrench. Treating Cotton Seed Oil
RM2CR4ADX–. American engineer and railroad journal . The machinemay be driven either by a belt from a line shaft or by a 30 h.p.constant speed motor. It is provided with a water circu-lating apparatus having a capacity of 80 gals, per minute, 40 gals, on each wheel. The base of the machine is arrangedwith a settling tank and with a large water tank in the foun-dation, from which the machine draws its supply. Thesettling tank is arranged so that it may be removed by theoverhead crane and emptied when necessary. PLANER TYPE MILLING MACHINE. The illustration shows an improved design of Newton hori-zontal s
RM2ABWCR1–Improved Scaffold Clamp. Improved Cotton Press. Improved Sawmill Dog. Improved Plow. Combined Fork Hook Shovel and Hoe. Improved Hillside Plow. Improved Distance Pleasuring Apparatus. Improved Harneria Attachment. Improved Roof Truss. Improved Cotton Press. Improved Estimator. Improved Windmill. Improved Step Ladder. Improved Screen Window Blind. Improved Water Wheel. Improved Sash Fastener. Improved Cotton Press. Improved Device for Taking up the Slack of Lines. Improved Plenum and Vacuum Pumps. Improved Fruit Protector. Improved Washing Machine. Improved Hay Derritk. Improved Ore Separator
RMRG2J3J–. Canadian forest industries 1880-1881. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. SAW S REPAIRED. EVERY SAW WARRANTED. SZEHSriD FOE PEICES. 6l13 KERR BROS. PRACTICAL FOUNDERS, MACHINISTS, And MILLWRIGHTS. Manufacturers of Marine and Horizontal and Portable Engines, Boilers, Grain Elevators and Steam Hoists, Saw and Flour Mill Machinery, with latest improvements, a specialty. The Abel Edward"s Centennial Turbine Water Wheel. Eodebaugh"s Saw Frame, Mill Dogs and Saw Guides. Water-works, the latest" and most improved, made to Order. L"ght and Hea
RMRG2J4D–. Canadian forest industries 1880-1881. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. SAW S REPAIRED. EVERY SAW WARRANTED. SZEHSriD FOE PEICES. 6l13 KERR BROS. PRACTICAL FOUNDERS, MACHINISTS, And MILLWRIGHTS. Manufacturers of Marine and Horizontal and Portable Engines, Boilers, Grain Elevators and Steam Hoists, Saw and Flour Mill Machinery, with latest improvements, a specialty. The Abel Edward"s Centennial Turbine Water Wheel. Eodebaugh"s Saw Frame, Mill Dogs and Saw Guides. Water-works, the latest" and most improved, made to Order. L"ght and Hea
RMRG0H7J–. Canadian forest industries 1894-1896. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. 3- THK LUMBERMAN November, 1896 at Martin"s Head. The price paid was the round sum of $100,000. Preparations for rebuilding were made at once and a few weeks ago the new mill was put in operation. Like its predecessors, it is run by water power, two water wheels driving the ma- chinery. One of these is a 66 inch turbine which was in the old mill. The other is a Blake or Cleveland improved 60 inch wheel, made in St. John. The two wheels are so arranged that either
RMRG2FRC–. Canadian forest industries 1882. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. Send for Circulars and Prices to H. R. IVES » Co..Montreal JOSEPH HALL Mfg. Co., (ESTABLISHED 1851.) OSHAWA, ONTARIO. MANUFACTURE THE CELEBRATED JAMES LEFFEL"S Double Turbine Water Wheel, All Sizes of Stationary and Portable Engines and Boilers, Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers, Gearing, latest improved English and American Gangs. The Steam"s Circular Saw Mills with Fractional Head Blocks and King of Dogs—this Mill is acknowledged in the United States and Canada to he super
RMRG2ER3–. Canadian forest industries 1882. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. JOSEPH HALL Mfg. Co., (ESTABLISHED 1851.) PSHAW A, ONTARIO. MANUFACTURE THE CELEBRATED JAMES LEFFEL"S. Double Turbine Water Wheel, All Sizes or Stationary and Portable Engines and Boilers, Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers, Clearing, latest improved English and American Gangs- The Stearn"8 Circular Saw Mills with Fractional Head Blocks and King of Dogs—this Mill is acknowledged in the United States and Canada to be superior to all others—alBO a very complete Circular Saw Mil
In our mill we offer accommodation in 11 romantic single, double and triple rooms, with a bath and shower. The rooms will take you back to the half- forgotten times of our grandparents. Each rooms is different, with a unique charm and scent. The rooms have been given a girl´s name instead of a number. T.G Masaryk, then an MP, but later the first Czechoslovak president, rested in one of the suites when visiting the mill. We hope you will also have a chance to relax and feel at home.
The Brusenka Restaurant and Pension arose from the reconstruction of the original building of Manor Mill in Brusné, which was one of the oldest free redeemed mills in the region. The first mention of the mill dates back to the early 14th century, when it was a part of the Gothic Křídlo Castle´s surroundings. Between 1762–1763, the mill was redeemed under the rule of Countess Marie Amalia Rottal, later De Monte l`Abbate after her marriage. A copy of the purchase deed (the original was destroyed by fire) was preserved. Between 1827 and 1924 the mill was under the domain of Count Laudon from the nearby town of Bystřice pod Hostýnem. The building of the mill was reconstructed following a big fire on August 6, 1921, and was subsequently rebuilt according to the plans of an unknown Viennese architect in the early rural modernity style. The steam-powered saw was set up on the neighbouring site. The saw was also completed with the Francis water turbine that is now displayed on the parking lot in front of the mill. The new water mill for the overshot is a replica. The wheel diameter is 4.85 meters, it contains 48 paddles and its weight in the dry state is 1.8t. The wheel is driven by water from the mill. In 1997, we opened Brusenka for the public.