MILLS AND FISHERIES (fn. 1)
In the 11th century there were at least five water-mills
in Oxford, two on the west side of Grandpont belonging to Eynsham abbey, two 'near the wall', probably
on Trill mill stream, and the Castle mill. (fn. 2) In the Middle
Ages there were mills at Oseney and possibly on the
Greyfriars site, and numerous others close to Oxford,
within or just outside the liberty, notably Langford
mill (probably on the site of the later Hinksey mill) at
the southern end of Grandpont, (fn. 3) two mills in Cowley,
on the river Cherwell below Magdalen Bridge, (fn. 4) two or
three mills at Holywell, of which King's mill belonged
to Headington parish, (fn. 5) two mills at Seacourt, (fn. 6) and
others at Botley, Godstow, and Wolvercote. (fn. 7) Such an
agglomeration caused frequent disputes over the supply of water. (fn. 8) In 1295 the miller of Trill mill was
accused of interfering with the weir of Blackfriars'
mill, (fn. 9) and in 1337 men from Medley, Binsey, and
Oseney broke sluices and weirs at Castle mill. (fn. 10) Two
new mills built by the abbot of Oseney c. 1350 were
blamed for obstructing the river and flooding the
Castle mills and meadows, (fn. 11) and in 1412 the abbey's
four mills were said to take too much water away from
Castle mills. (fn. 12) In 1576, on the other hand, Christ
Church complained that Castle mills took too much
water from Oseney mills. (fn. 13) Mills built on the Thames
by the abbess of Godstow in the early 13th century
and by the abbot of Abingdon c. 1344 were also
blamed for damaging Castle mills. (fn. 14) In 1738 the tenant
of Rewley was accused of diverting water away from
Castle mills. (fn. 15) In 1486 it was agreed that a new mill on
the river Cherwell would be moved because it was
interfering with Holywell mill. (fn. 16)
In the later Middle Ages the number of mills in and
around Oxford decreased, and by the mid 17th century only Oseney, Castle, Langford (Hinksey),
Holywell, King's, and Botley mills were in operation. (fn. 17)
King's mill was closed in 1832. (fn. 18) By 1797 a corn-mill,
Weirs mill, had been built on a branch of the Thames,
on the south eastern boundary of St. Aldate's parish.
About 1825 it and Hinksey mill became paper-mills
and continued as such, manufacturing cardboard,
until the early 20th century. (fn. 19) By 1876 there was a
flour-mill at Folly Bridge and a steam-and saw-mill in
St. Aldate's Street. (fn. 20) The St. Aldate's mill seems to have
been closed by 1890, and the mill at Folly Bridge had
been converted into a private house by 1900. (fn. 21)
Castle mill.
Castle mill was probably held by Earl
Alfgar in the mid 11th century and by Robert d'Oilly
after the Conquest. (fn. 22) It was held by the younger
Robert d'Oilly in the early 12th century, (fn. 23) and presumably eschaeted to the Crown on the death of
Henry d'Oilly in 1163. (fn. 24)
One moiety of the mill was farmed by the sheriff
with the castle and county, (fn. 25) until it was assigned in
dower to Queen Eleanor in 1271, Queen Margaret in
1299, and Queen Isabella in 1318. (fn. 26) It was later
granted for life to Edward III's brother, John of
Eltham, in 1330, to Thomas de Ponynges in 1337, to
Reynold of Cobham in 1339, and to Richard Forster
in 1364. (fn. 27) In 1386 the reversion was granted to
Oseney abbey, which had apparently leased the moiety
of the mill since 1292. (fn. 28) At the Dissolution the mill
reverted to the Crown, and in 1542 was granted to
Robert King, bishop of Oxford. (fn. 29) In 1548 he granted
an 80-year lease to George Owen of Godstow, (fn. 30) whose
son Richard in 1559 sold the residue of the term to the
city which had controlled the whole mill since at least
1534. (fn. 31) In 1557 Bishop King took steps to regain
possession of his half of the mill, (fn. 32) but he died the same
year, and the see remained vacant until 1589 when the
new bishop, John Underhill, offered to sell the reversion of the mill to the city. (fn. 33) In 1590, however,
Elizabeth I granted the reversion to Thomas Crompton
and others, agents for Robert, earl of Essex, who sold
it to the city in 1591. (fn. 34) Christ Church attempted,
unsuccessfully, to claim the mill in 1616. (fn. 35)
The other moiety of the mill was probably granted
to the town with the fee farm in 1199 (fn. 36) and remained
in its possession thereafter. The city leased the mills for
terms of years from 1623 until 1678; it then took them
back into its own hands (fn. 37) and let them on short leases
until 1763 (fn. 38) when the policy of granting long leases for
entry fines was resumed. In 1930 the city regained
possession of the mills and demolished them to widen
the road. (fn. 39)
All common bakers and freemen of Oxford owed
suit to Castle mills on pain of forfeiting corn ground
elsewhere, but there were frequent evasions and complaints of high tolls, particularly by members of the
university and privileged persons. In 1305 the university complained that the millers were taking too high a
toll, (fn. 40) and in 1316-17 the town alleged that the
university proctors were taking away toll-corn due to
the mill. (fn. 41) In 1455 it was agreed that the farmers of the
mills and their millers should bear most of the
expenses of grinding and the bakers pay a slightly
increased toll of ½ bu. for every quarter of grain
ground; if the mills were not working the bakers were
to pay the farmers a 'gristpenny' for permission to
grind elsewhere. (fn. 42)
In 1528 George Owen claimed exemption, as a
privileged person of the university, from suit to the
mill, (fn. 43) but in 1545 the Court of Requests ruled that
John Lewis, a freeman baker who was also manciple of
University College, must grind at Castle mills but
might also employ his own miller. (fn. 44) In 1569 the city
gave Lewis licence to grind 24 qr. of wheat a year
away from Castle mills, for a yearly payment of £14. (fn. 45)
In 1597, between 1607 and 1610, in 1617, 1621, and
between 1664 and 1667 the city was involved in
disputes with the university, and particularly with
Merton College, over the use of Holywell mill by
bakers claiming to be privileged. (fn. 46) The city claimed,
unsuccessfully, that all bakers were obliged to become
freemen and to grind at Castle mills; the university
maintained that it might set up certain privileged
bakers. (fn. 47)
Orders to freemen and bakers to grind at Castle
mills, repeated regularly in the 16th century, were
frequently ignored. (fn. 48) In 1600 men were appointed to
seize meal ground illicitly elsewhere, (fn. 49) and in the early
17th century the millers of Holywell, Oseney, and
other neighbouring mills were accused of grinding for
those who owed suit to Castle mills. (fn. 50) In 1619, to win
custom and goodwill, the toll of ½ bu. on a quarter of
corn was commuted to 20d., (fn. 51) but in 1662 and 1664
some city tenants still failed to grind at the mills. (fn. 52) The
order to grind there was repeated in 1678; (fn. 53) in 1680
the council contemplated legal action to enforce the
custom, (fn. 54) but thereafter seems to have accepted the
loss of the city monopoly.
The value of the mills varied greatly. In 1560-1 the
profits were c. £200, in 1592-3 only £71, in 1596-7
over £300, but in 1620-1 apparently only £13. (fn. 55) From
1623 onwards the mill yielded a rent of £80 a year and
occasional entry fines. In the early 18th century the
rent was £85 but was reduced in the 1750s. (fn. 56) After
1763, when the mills were again let on long leases,
renewal fines fell from £300 to only £206 by 1889. (fn. 57)
Until 1549 mill profits were taken by the bailiffs
towards the fee farm. (fn. 58) Thereafter, until the mills were
leased in 1623, four millmasters were appointed
yearly, and were accountable to the keykeepers. (fn. 59) A
court leet and view of frankpledge for all suitors to the
mills was first recorded in 1337. (fn. 60) Its rolls were quoted
in a law-suit with Merton c. 1610, (fn. 61) and perquisites of
court, fines, and forfeitures were included in leases of
the mill until 1763. (fn. 62) The court amerced people for
obstructing water-courses, freemen for grinding away
from the mills or witholding toll, and millers for such
offences as leaving the mill in charge of an unqualified
man. (fn. 63)
Castle mill was a double mill by the 12th century. (fn. 64)
Repairs to it while in the king's hands were recorded in
1245, 1272, and 1383. (fn. 65) Thereafter Oseney abbey and
the town presumably shared the cost, and in the 16th
and 17th centuries the city spent large sums on the
mills and water-courses, including building a third
wheel, later called New Cut mill, in 1597. (fn. 66) A fourth
wheel, added by 1623, (fn. 67) was remade in 1692. (fn. 68) In
1700 the tenant agreed to keep the mills in repair, (fn. 69)
but the city repaired them in 1704, and contributed to
the rebuilding of New Cut mill in 1705. In 1707 one
of the mills was inoperative. (fn. 70) Although from 1718
onwards tenants were responsible for repairs, (fn. 71) the city
also paid for work in 1735, 1745, 1747 and 1751. (fn. 72)
The mills were rebuilt shortly before 1781, presumably by the tenant. (fn. 73) They continued as corn-mills until
1929, when the tenant was a waste-paper merchant. (fn. 74)
Blackfriars' mill.
Ealdorman Athelmer gave two
mills on the west side of Grandpont to Eynsham abbey
between 1005 and 1013. (fn. 75) They were granted to Nigel
d'Oilly by Abbot Columbanus (fl. 1086, 1094), but
were confirmed to the abbey in 1091, in 1109, and
between 1157 and 1163. (fn. 76) Before 1247 Walter Mauclerc, bishop of Carlisle, bought the mills from Henry
son of Henry of Oxford, presumably Eynsham's tenant, and gave them to the preaching friars. Eynsham
abbey released the friars from payment of the 40s. a
year for the mills. (fn. 77) The mills were confirmed to the
friars in 1336. (fn. 78) By 1500 the mill-stream had silted up
so badly that the mills had ceased to work (fn. 79) and they
were not included among the possessions of the friary
in 1538. (fn. 80)
Botley mill.
A mill which the abbot of Abingdon
built c. 1344 on a stream of the Thames flowing from
Botley towards Castle mill (fn. 81) may have been within the
bounds of Oxford. A mill-pond and watercourse
belonging to the abbot's mill ran along the edge of
King's mead in the mid 14th century. (fn. 82)
Godstow mill.
The abbess of Godstow was said to
have built a mill in the suburbs of Oxford during King
John's reign. (fn. 83) It may have been the mill at Oxford at
which an abbess's servant was killed in 1250, (fn. 84) but it
was more probably at the northern end of Port
Meadow. At the Dissolution Godstow's possessions
included land called Mill furlong, but no mill. (fn. 85)
Greyfriars' mill.
There was a mill on part of the
Greyfriars' site by 1668, apparently associated with a
brew-house, and it was last recorded in 1732. (fn. 86)
Anthony Wood ignored it, although he assumed that
the Greyfriars had owned a mill. (fn. 87)
Holywell mill.
Henry Simeon granted a moiety of
Holywell mill c. 1200 to William Hosar, who soon
afterwards granted it to Oseney abbey; (fn. 88) between
1266 and 1279 Oseney granted it to Merton College. (fn. 89)
The other moiety was held in the 13th century by a
succession of prominent burgesses. (fn. 90) In 1301-2 it was
acquired by Philip Worminghall who in 1302 leased
the other moiety from Merton. (fn. 91) Philip's interest passed to his relict Eleanor who, with her second husband
William of Bicester, sold it in 1331 to men acting for
Merton College. (fn. 92) The college leased the property to
millers until 1877, when it was exchanged with Magdalen College for other property in Oxford. (fn. 93)
The mill was a double one by c. 1200 and seems to
have remained a corn-mill throughout. (fn. 94) In 1336
Merton claimed that, working day and night, it
ground 10 qr. of corn a day. (fn. 95) It presumably served the
college's tenants in Holywell until the city lost its
monopoly of grinding freemen's corn in the 17th
century. It was a corn-mill in 1876, but had been
converted into a private house by 1900. (fn. 96)
Magdalen mill.
In 1486 Magadalen College agreed
to remove a newly-built mill so as not to impede
Holywell mill. (fn. 97) There is no further record of it; Wood
believed it had been built by St. John's hospital, but the
hospital's mill was King's mill in Headington. (fn. 98)
Oseney mill.
Between 1182 and 1189 Bernard of St.
Valery granted the canons of Oseney a weir in the river
Thames with the water-course running to their mill. (fn. 99)
By 1225 there was more than one wheel, and by 1249
there was a fulling-mill in addition to the earlier
corn-mills. In 1412 four newly-built mills in the abbey
were taking water from Castle mill. (fn. 1)
In addition to the mills within the abbey precint the
abbot in the mid 14th century built two mills on a
backwater behind Warham Bank in St. Thomas's
parish. Complaints were made in 1350 and 1371 that
the new mills damaged Castle mills, and they may have
been removed, for they were last recorded in 1373. (fn. 2)
At the Dissolution the Oseney mills, described as
fulling-mills, gig-mills (for raising a nap on cloth), and
corn-mills, passed with the abbey site to Christ
Church, which in 1547 leased the site, with the mills,
to William Stumpe, clothier. (fn. 3) Stumpe assigned his
lease in 1554 or 1555 to another clothier James
Atwood, whose sons James and Thomas took a new
lease from Christ Church in 1565 and held the site
until the 1580s. (fn. 4) A grist-mill was recorded in 1611 and
during the Civil War the mills were used as powdermills. (fn. 5) In 1659 the tenant of Castle mill planned to
build new fulling-mills at Oseney. (fn. 6) In 1775 part of the
buildings were used as a china factory, (fn. 7) but the mill
continued in use. Before 1829 the tenant had built
saw-mills; (fn. 8) a bone-mill was added in 1844 and
another in 1848. (fn. 9) The mill was described as a flourmill in 1876, and remained so until its closure in
1965. (fn. 10)
Priory mill.
A mill associated with Bishopsmore
meadow was confirmed to St. Frideswide's priory in
1158, and the priory held a mill south of Trill mill c.
1180. (fn. 11) The mill, thought by Wood to have been two
distinct mills, Priory and Bishopsmore, (fn. 12) presumably
stood on the Trill mill stream, and may perhaps have
been the second mill held by the king's thegn Sawold in
1086. (fn. 13) Roger son of lungwine held a mill, perhaps
this one, from St. Frideswide's in 1182, (fn. 14) but no
further reference to it has been found.
Rewley mill.
In 1555 the city allowed Thomas
Mallinson to set up a fulling-mill at Rewley on land
leased from Christ Church. (fn. 15) It was being built at
Mallinson's death in 1557, (fn. 16) but no later record of it
has been found.
Trill mill.
The mill was recorded by name in the late
12th century when Benet Kepeharm granted it to St.
Frideswide's priory. (fn. 17) By the mid 15th century, however, it was identified with a mill given to the priory by
Robert the priest c. 1122, (fn. 18) and it has also been
identified with one or both mills held by Sawold in
1086. (fn. 19) The priory made a grant of the mill c. 1250, but
recovered it c. 1275. It was last recorded in 1331, but
was presumably still in existence when the priory's
cartulary was compiled in the mid 15th century. (fn. 20) It
was not among the priory's possessions granted to the
bishop of Oxford in 1546, and had certainly disappeared by the mid 17th century. (fn. 21)
Other mill.
A windmill at 'Rome', near the junction
of Banbury Road and the modern Parks Road, in the
early 17th century had disappeared by the 1660s. (fn. 22) A
number of horse-mills were recorded in 13th-century
Oxford. (fn. 23) The mill in a brewery in St. Mary's parish in
1466 was also presumably a horse-mill, (fn. 24) and in 1643
three horse-mills were built to replace some of the
water-mills made useless by the fortifications of the
city. (fn. 25)
FISHERIES.
The city acquired the waters and fisheries
within its liberty in 1199. (fn. 26) From the mid 16th century
the common waters were under the control of two city
water-bailiffs, who from 1783 onwards were salaried
officials. (fn. 27) In 1722 extra men were appointed to protect the common fishery, and in 1732 they were called
'conservators of the fishery', (fn. 28) but they do not seem to
have become permanent officials. The chief task of the
water-bailiffs and other officers was to keep 'foreigners' from fishing in the common waters and to
prevent the use of illegal nets. (fn. 29) They also enforced the
observance of 'fence months' in the spring and summer
when fishing was forbidden. In the 19th century the
fence months were from February to May inclusive, (fn. 30)
but in the 16th century the closed season began at the
end of February and continued until at least Michaelmas. (fn. 31) The mayor and bailiffs were each allowed one
day's fishing before the waters were opened to other
freemen. (fn. 32) By a custom described as ancient in the 17th
century the fishermen of St. Thomas's parish supplied
the mayor with fish during Lent, (fn. 33) perhaps in return
for permission to fish.
The most valuable fisheries were those by mills, and
they were usually let with the mill. (fn. 34) In 1571, however,
the city leased Castle mill fishery, from Hythe Bridge
to the mill, separately. (fn. 35) Other parts of the waters were
also leased; in 1556 the fisheries recorded were from
Grandpont to Magdalen College, from Grandpont to
'the ferry', presumably at Hinksey, from the castle mill
tail to the point of Oseney mead, and from Hythe
Bridge to Godstow. (fn. 36) At other times fisheries were
recorded in Warham water or the backstream in St.
Thomas's parish, from Magdalen Bridge to Stubb
Lake, on the north of Botley mill, from Castle mill to
'the new bridge', and from Folly Bridge to Chilswell
Pool. (fn. 37) The city retained control of the fishing from
Oseney Bridge to Port Meadow in 1977. In the 15th
century the fishing in the river Cherwell as far as
Magdalen Bridge belonged to Merton College as lords
of Holywell, and to St. John's hospital, later Magdalen
College. (fn. 38)