ANCIENT MILLS
In 1086 Witney manor included two water mills
together rendering 32s. 6d. a year. Probably they stood
near the sites of Waleys or Farm Mill near the
12th-century manorial precinct, and of Woodford or
Witney Mill at the town's northern end, at what may
both have been early crossings of the river Windrush. (fn. 1)
Outlying mills at Hailey (near modern New Mill) and at
Crawley were added probably in the late 12th or early
13th century, when the bishop invested in several new or
expanded mills both for corn-milling and for fulling; an
unspecified new mill at Witney was mentioned in
1208–9, and by 1210–11 the manorial mills were let for
a total of £16 13s. 4d., rising by 1213 to £18. (fn. 2) The
number of mills varied with the fortunes of the local
cloth industry, (fn. 3) but all four sites were associated with
cloth manufacture at various times, and from the early
19th century became increasingly mechanized. The
following account summarises the history and ownership of Woodford and Farm Mills; Crawley Mill and
New Mill are treated below, and the industrial development of the sites from the 19th century is discussed
above. (fn. 4)
Witney or Woodford Mill
Medieval Mills Though individual mills were not
usually recorded by name until the mid 13th century, a
rent increase of 13s. 4d. by 1218 was specifically for
Woodford Mill. The following year the combined
mill-rent of £18 13s. 4d. was for three mills, though
whether they were each on separate sites is not clear. (fn. 5) By
the 1230s there were six mills on Witney manor, of
which three were probably at Woodford: three tenants
there paid rent of £12 a year, (fn. 6) the same rent which by
mid century was owed for two corn mills and a fulling
mill at Woodford. (fn. 7) Many 13th-century tenants of
Woodford Mills also held Waleys or Farm Mill, (fn. 8) and
included several leading burgesses. (fn. 9)
The Woodford fulling mill, of which half was let separately in 1301–2 and 1305 for only 10s., (fn. 10) may have
been abandoned soon afterwards, reflecting apparent
contraction in Witney's developing cloth industry. In
the early 14th century Woodford and Waleys Mills were
let together for a reduced rent of £13 6s. 8d., increased by
the 1330s and until the Black Death to £14 13s. 4d. after
Waleys fulling mill had been rebuilt; there was no
mention of Woodford fulling mill, and a lease of 1347
granting the mills to two men for the bishop's lifetime
again included only two corn mills at Woodford. (fn. 11) After
the Black Death the two life tenants were unwilling to
continue in their lease and their £100 bond was
returned. In the 1350s all the manorial mills were let
with difficulty for around £8, (fn. 12) and by 1362–3 they were
again unlet. (fn. 13) In the later 14th century the two Woodford
corn mills, no longer let with Waleys Mills, yielded rents
ranging from £8 to £13 6s. 8d., but by 1398 and
throughout the earlier 15th century only £7 6s. 8d. The
tenant in 1398 held a 12-year lease, but by 1409 his
tenancy was for life. (fn. 14)
In 1458–9 a new fulling mill was built on the Woodford site, possibly, as later, on the north bank of the mill
stream. All three mills at Woodford, with 6 a. of demesne
arable besides the usual mill meadows, were let for 20
years to Richard and Thomas Cobwell at £8 13s. 4d. a
year. (fn. 15) In 1476 the lease was renewed at the same rent for
16 years to William Wady the elder, lessee also of
Crawley corn mill, followed by 20-year leases to William
Wady the younger (ending c. 1499), and to Richard Hill
(ending c. 1524). (fn. 16) In 1524 the two Woodford corn mills
were separately let for 21 years to an Oxford miller, (fn. 17) but
before 1527 William Bishop took over the long lease of
the corn mills at £9 a year, while the fulling mill was let
on a yearly basis to his father Richard for 26s. 8d. (fn. 18) In
1538, after Richard's death, William fined for the fulling
mill, (fn. 19) which seems to have been treated thereafter as a
copyhold, distinct from the leasehold corn mills until the
site was reunited in the 1880s.
The 16th to Early 19th Century The Bishop family
(later sometimes called Bishop alias Martin) held
Woodford Mills throughout the 16th century. (fn. 20) In 1590
John and Richard Bishop fined for the fulling mill on the
death of their father Thomas, and in 1596 they were
licensed to let it. (fn. 21) In the early 17th century the fulling
mill copyhold became divided between female heirs of
Richard Bishop, (fn. 22) and it descended in two parts until the
19th century. In 1646 Thomas King, whose family held
the main lease of Woodford for much of the 17th
century, was paying £9 rent for the two corn mills and
the land, while Henry White and Thomas Jordan each
paid 13s. 4d. for their share of the fulling mill. (fn. 23) The
Jordans still held a share in 1665, but in 1678 William
White, clerk, whose family had acquired its half of the
fulling mill from Joan Bishop in 1626, died in possession
of both parts. (fn. 24) In the 1680s White's daughter Elizabeth
Pusey and her husband Richard surrendered half to
Henry Ashfield (apparently mortgager since 1657) and
the other to Anthony Barfoot, clothier; (fn. 25) the Barfoot
share passed in 1703 to the Witney clothier John Collier,
who in 1705 agreed a complex partition of the fulling
mill property with Hannah Ashfield, which gave him the
east end of the main building, the east side of a north
wing, the mill wheel and two stocks, and the three
northern bays of a separate work-house. The Ashfield
and Collier families retained their interests in the fulling
mill into the 19th century. (fn. 26)
In 1649, when Witney manor was sold by the Parliamentary commissioners, it was said to include three
water corn mills at Woodford, together with 9 a. of
arable and various meadow pieces; no fulling mill was
mentioned, presumably in error. (fn. 27) The Kings employed
millers, and the name Granger's mill at the Woodford
site on a map of 1662 may refer to a subtenant, though
the mill was still sometimes called King's Mill in the
1690s. (fn. 28) By then the lessee seems to have been Nicholas
Beale, whose family also worked Crawley Mill. (fn. 29)
In 1739, when Lord Cornbury granted James Tasker a
21-year lease of Woodford Mills for £86 a year, they
comprised water grist-mills and a fulling mill, the latter
evidently distinct from the copyhold fulling mill shared
by the Ashfield and Collier families; (fn. 30) land attached to
Tasker's mills totalled some 25 acres. (fn. 31) In 1767 the duke
of Marlborough renewed Tasker's lease for 21 years at
£105 a year, (fn. 32) and in the late 18th century and early 19th
Thomas Tasker was paying £125 a year for the mills,
which were still described as fulling and grist mills in
1814. (fn. 33) Before 1818 Tasker had been succeeded as lessee
by William Long, described in 1817 as a miller and of
Curbridge; (fn. 34) he was, however, principally a farmer and
timber dealer, and may have sublet the mills. Long was
succeeded in the main lease, perhaps in the 1820s, by the
blanket manufacturer John Early, presumably John
Early (d. 1862). When the corn mills were converted to
blanket making is not certain, but by 1830 John Early
and Co. were established both at New Mill and at Witney
Mill, the name by then applied to the leasehold part of
the Woodford site. (fn. 35) A lease of the mills to Early, made
on behalf of the duke of Marlborough before 1834,
expired in 1838; in an agreement for its renewal made in
1837, the premises were described as a factory, fulling
mill, dwelling house, and land, and it was noted that the
mills had been burnt down in 1834 and rebuilt over the
next year. (fn. 36) In 1841 Early's lease from the duke of
Marlborough was of the mill house, the buildings which
spanned the mill stream, and a total of 32 a. of meadows
and closes. (fn. 37)
The Collier share of the copyhold fulling mill was let
by the mid 18th century to the Collins family, local
blanket weavers, (fn. 38) and in 1808 John Collier of Hatton
Garden (Mdx.), son of Joshua Collier of Witney (d.
1735), re-let his share to Thomas Collins senior and
junior for 14 years. By 1812, however, Collier's tenant
was William Long, and in 1823 Collier's grandson J. P.
Collier renewed the 14-year lease to Long and to Charles
Leake. John Early was sub-tenant by 1828. In 1831 J. P.
Collier sold his share in the mill to William Long, who
had agreed a sub-sale, perhaps a mortgage, with the
banker J. W. Clinch. (fn. 39) The Ashfield portion of the fulling
mill was mortgaged from 1739 to the Palmer family, and
the copyhold seems to have passed before 1757 to Joseph
Palmer (d. 1768) of Witney, fellmonger, who
bequeathed the reversion of his interest to various
Ashfield relatives. (fn. 40) The Ashfields retained a share of the
mill until 1811 when Richard Ashfield sold to John and
J. W. Clinch; in 1829 J. W. Clinch was admitted to the
copyhold. (fn. 41) Part of 'late Palmer's mill', however, seems to
have been acquired by the Marriott family before 1786,
when land tax on it was shared by an Ashfield and a
Marriott, and Marriotts continued to pay tax on the mill
into the 1830s. In the early 19th century the Ashfields'
share of the tax was paid by John Collier, suggesting that
he was sub-lessee before the eventual sale to the Clinches
in 1811. (fn. 42)
In 1841 most of the copyhold part of the Woodford
site was held by J. W. Clinch, but the fulling mill itself,
sited on the north bank of the mill stream, was jointly
owned by Clinch and Thomas Marriott; the tenant was
the blanket maker Richard Early (d. 1856). Clinch also
owned a corn mill, sited just east of the fulling mill and
held by John Early's brother-in-law Paul Harris. (fn. 43) It is not
known when that corn mill was built, but it was apparently not there in 1757, nor in 1814; (fn. 44) possibly it was built
after John Early converted the main mills for blanket
manufacture, perhaps in the 1820s.
The Mid 19th Century and Later Though the Earlys
occupied much of the site from possibly the 1820s or
1830s, it remained divided until bought by Charles Early
& Co. in the 1880s. In 1882 the firm renewed the lease of
Witney Mills from the duke of Marlborough for 16 years
at £178 a year, and in 1886 bought the freehold for
£3,750; (fn. 45) two years later it bought from William Clinch
the former copyhold fulling mill property, still known as
Woodford Mill, which it may already have been renting.
New industrial buildings were being added by the 1860s,
and the corn mill was demolished in 1888, to be replaced
by a two-storeyed stock house; the sites's subsequent
expansion is detailed above. (fn. 46) The old mill straddling the
mill stream, called the 'front mill', was extended in 1896
but burnt in 1905, and only partly rebuilt. The old
fulling mill on the north bank of the mill stream, perhaps
(like Farm Mill) rebuilt in the 1830s, continued in use as
a stock house in the later 20th century. (fn. 47) The expanded
site remained the Earlys' principal factory until the
firm's closure in 2002.
Waleys (later Farm) Mill
A forerunner of Farm Mill was named Walens or Waleys
Mill by the 1220s, probably from an earlier miller. (fn. 48) By
the 1220s it contributed £3 6s. 8d. to the total manorial
mill rent of £18 13s. 4d.; by 1235 its rent had increased to
£5 6s. 8d. (fn. 49) In 1248–9 that rent was for two corn mills,
but by 1251–2 Waleys Mills comprised a corn mill and a
fulling mill, held by the two men who held Woodford
Mills. (fn. 50)
The rent was unchanged in the later 13th century,
when Waleys and Woodford Mills were let together,
usually to three or four tenants. (fn. 51) In 1301–2 the mills
were briefly in hand, repairs including re-roofing at
Waleys. (fn. 52) By 1306 the Waleys and Woodford mills were
let at a reduced rent of £13 6s. 8d., perhaps because there
was no longer a fulling mill at Woodford. (fn. 53) In 1328
major works at Waleys included rebuilding the fulling
mill, apparently extending it onto adjacent meadow; (fn. 54)
the combined rent for Waleys and Woodford Mills was
then increased to £14 13s. 4d., which remained
unchanged until the Black Death. (fn. 55)
In the 1350s Waleys and Woodford Mills were let
together at a much reduced rent, (fn. 56) but were frequently in
hand in the later 14th century. (fn. 57) The corn mill at Waleys
seems to have ceased, and by the early 15th century the
fulling mill was let for terms of years at an annual rent of
£2 13s. 4d. (fn. 58) A 20-year lease granted to two men at £2 a
year about 1440 was renewed to Robert Box and
Thomas Nobys in 1460, and in 1496 William Box took
on a new lease of two fulling mills at Waleys at the same
rent. Box was still lessee in the 1520s, (fn. 59) but from the
1530s the mill was let for £2 a year to successive
members of the Brice family, lessees of the bishop's
manor house and demesne farm. (fn. 60) By will proved 1548
Thomas Brice left to his brother Richard reversion of
Waleys fulling mill, which had been sublet to his uncle,
the prominent clothier Leonard Yate, for a term still
unexpired at Yate's death in 1554. (fn. 61) In the later 16th
century Stephen Brice's £32 -rent for the demesne
included £2 for Waleys Mill, which was still held on
identical terms by Thomas Brice in 1630. (fn. 62) Though still
called 'Wallis Mill' in 1646, and shown (unnamed) on a
map of 1662, by 1695 it was recorded as Farm Mill; it
was said still to belong to the demesne or Witney Farm,
but no subtenants were noted. (fn. 63)
Farm Mill remained a fulling mill in the 18th century,
and from 1736 was let by Lord Cornbury for 7 years to
the Witney mercer and woolstapler Edward Witts at £35
a year. Witts, who evidently sublet, was succeeded in the
lease before 1756 by his son Edward, who was lessee at
the end of the century. (fn. 64) By 1813 Messrs Hankins and Co.
were lessees at £52 10s. a year, increased before 1818 to
£63; by then the mill was let with some 6 a. of land. (fn. 65)
The blanket manufacturer Edward Early (d. 1874)
acquired the lease of Farm Mill before 1841 (fn. 66) and probably much earlier: possibly he was responsible for
building the surviving mill after it was destroyed by fire
in 1837. (fn. 67) Early remained lessee in 1863, paying £125 a
year. (fn. 68) In 1841 the mill house was occupied by a wool
carder, and in 1861 the mill was a woollen-mop factory,
with a resident foreman. (fn. 69) In the early 1870s the mill was
converted by the firm of J. W. Gardner for manufacture
of agricultural manure from bonemeal; (fn. 70) that venture
was short-lived, and in 1881 the mill was vacant. It was
taken over before 1887 by A. L. Leigh, a corn dealer at
No. 34 Market Place, who until at least 1903 operated
Farm Mill as a flour mill, powered by water and steam. (fn. 71)
Before 1907 Leigh was succeeded in both shop and mill
by Walker & Atkinson Ltd., who continued there until
around 1930. (fn. 72) In 1952 the freehold was sold by the duke
of Marlborough, and when re-sold in 1955 the mill still
contained an undershot wheel and other machinery. (fn. 73) In
1966 it was bought by Oxfordshire County Council for
use a record store, but was sold in 1998. (fn. 74)