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Halnaker Windmill

Coordinates: 50°52′44″N 0°41′38″W / 50.879°N 0.694°W / 50.879; -0.694
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Halnaker Windmill
Map
Origin
Mill nameHalnaker Mill
Grid referenceSU 920 097
Coordinates50°52′44″N 0°41′38″W / 50.879°N 0.694°W / 50.879; -0.694
Operator(s)West Sussex County Council
Year builtMid-18th century
Information
PurposeCorn mill
TypeTower mill
StoreysFour storeys
No. of sailsFour sails
Type of sailsCommon sails
WindshaftCast iron (post restoration addition)
WindingFantail (missing)
No. of pairs of millstonesTwo pairs

Halnaker Windmill (/ˈhænəkər/ HAN-ə-kər)[1] is a tower mill which stands on Halnaker Hill, north-east of Chichester, Sussex, England. The mill is reached by a public footpath from the north end of Halnaker, where a track follows the line of Stane Street before turning west to the hilltop. There is no longer any machinery in the brick tower.[2]

1695 Map of Sussex by Robert Morden showing a windmill at Halnaker

History

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Halnaker Mill was first mentioned in 1540 as belonging to the manor of "Halfnaked". It was built for the Duke of Richmond as the feudal mill of the Goodwood Estate. The surviving mill is thought to date from the 1740s and is known to have been standing c.1780. Halnaker Mill was working until struck by lightning in 1905, damaging the sails and windshaft. The derelict mill was restored in 1934 by Neve's, the Heathfield millwrights as a memorial to the wife of Sir William Bird. Further repair work was done in 1954 by E Hole and Sons, The Burgess Hill millwrights.[3] The mill was again restored in 2004.[4] The mill is owned by West Sussex County Council.[5]

Description

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Halnaker Mill is a four-storey tower mill with a sixteen-sided beehive cap. The mill was originally hand-wound, and later fitted with a fantail, which was not replicated when the mill was restored. The four common sails were originally carried on a wooden windshaft, which was damaged by a 1905 lightning strike. A cast-iron windshaft and wooden brake wheel from a wind sawmill at Punnetts Town were fitted. The windshaft is cast in two pieces, bolted together and was too short for Halnaker Mill. Neve's inserted a spacer to lengthen it. The mill worked two pairs of overdrift millstones.[3]

Millers

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Source:[3]

  • John Hervey 1810
  • Charles Adams 1839–1870
  • G R Watkins 1868–1905

Hilaire Belloc

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Halnaker Mill (or Ha'nacker Mill, reflecting the true pronunciation) is the subject of a poem by the English writer Hilaire Belloc in which the collapse of the mill is used as a metaphor for the tragic decay of the prevailing moral and social system.

                 Ha'nacker Mill

      SALLY is gone that was so kindly,
          Sally is gone from Ha'nacker Hill
      And the Briar grows ever since then so blindly;
          And ever since then the clapper is still...
          And the sweeps have fallen from Ha'nacker Mill.

      Ha'nacker Hill is in Desolation:
          Ruin a-top and a field unploughed.
      And Spirits that call on a fallen nation,
          Spirits that loved her calling aloud,
          Spirits abroad in a windy cloud.

      Spirits that call and no one answers --
          Ha'nacker's down and England's done.
      Wind and Thistle for pipe and dancers,
          And never a ploughman under the Sun:
          Never a ploughman. Never a one.

There are musical settings of this poem by Peter Warlock and Ivor Gurney amongst others.

References

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  1. ^ Pointon, G. E. (1983). BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 112. ISBN 0-19-282745-6.
  2. ^ "Halnaker windmill". Sussex Mills Group. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
  3. ^ a b c Brunnarius, Martin (1979). The Windmills of Sussex. Chichester: Philimore. pp. 78–80, 191. ISBN 0-85033-345-8.
  4. ^ "Halnaker Windmill, West Sussex – 5th October 2004". Roughwood. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
  5. ^ "Landmark Windmill Being Restored Again" (Press release). West Sussex County Council. 11 August 2004. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2008.

Further reading

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Hemming, Peter (1936). The Windmills in Sussex. London: C W Daniel. Online version Archived 12 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine

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Media related to Halnaker Windmill at Wikimedia Commons