
A
BRIEF HISTORY
by Shirley Matthews B.A. (Hons)
Little Marton Windmill was recorded on Yates map of 1786 as a post mill.
The land was owned by the
The
current mill is actually a rebuild of another tower mill,
when in 1831 widow
Nancy Whalley was given the chance to rebuild the mill that
she and her son John were
using. Any bricks that were needed had to be bought from the local brick works
nearby, and any salvaged material also. The bill when completed was not to exceed
£800
Richard Blezard & Sons were the local millwrights,
and some of the
work was carried out by John Hayes.
For the latter part of the mill’s working life, George Bagot was miller, then later, the owner - John Talbot Clifton - decided to dispose of the land at Little Marton, Cornelius Bagot bought the mill in 1922 with the surrounding fields and the miller’s cottage. The Bagot’s also lived for a long time in Grahams House on the opposite side of the road to the mill (sadly it lies in ruins now) it was originally the Old Coaching House, an Inn for weary travellers on the old Roman Road that went to Kirkham.
Milling ceased in 1928, and in 1936 Cornelius became Chairman of C& S Brewery Ltd. So for many years the mill bore the slogan of the brewery on the outside of the mill.
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Cornelius Bagot (in car) bought the mill in 1922 together with the surrounding fields and the miller's cottage.......
(photo courtesy of |
One of the benefactors who gave £500 was Mrs Bill
Bickerstaffe, who's
husband was the Coxswain of the Blackpool
Lifeboat. Charles Allen Clarke
and the
Coxswain were old chums,
and
Clarke
wrote a lot about his
friends' heroic deeds at sea.
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By 1950 with little funds the Fellowship persuaded Blackpool Corporation to
takeover the mill,
as it was a proving a huge responsibility to maintain.
The Shepherd family became tenants for a year, making poultry appliances and living in the malt house. Then the 53rd Blackpool Scout Group (St Wilfred’s) used it as there headquarters, and made lots of repairs with help from the community, until it was deemed by Health & Safety in later years, to be unsafe. It was then mostly used as a storage place for the Scout’s Jamboree material. They continued to lease the mill from the council, at a peppercorn rent.
Charles
Allen Clarke’s grandaughter fought to have a replica plaque put on the
outside, as the original was deemed to be at risk, and eventually a
replica was
made, which can
be seen on the outside of the mill.
Become a member of the Friends of Marton Windmill - click here
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