Windmill Farm
taken from OS OpenData showing windmill farm and windmill Close, located on outer limit of Coton Green, Tamworth, click on for larger view.
This is the best candidates for Tamworth´s very own windmill. Moneymore mill is on the outer limits of this blogs area and windmill hill, Whittington is a big maybe. Windmill´s being the major landmarks they are, leave echoes in the landscape in the form of names. They seem to smother the immediate surrounding area with the words windmill, for example the names Windmill lane, windmill hill, windmill pub. In this case we´ve got the name of the farm itself and the nearby windmill close as reminders of the presence of the windmill. The word windmill has even totally smothered the previous paragraph and the last few posts.
Below is the 1815 ordnance map(taken from British library) with the windmill symbol. In the symbol it appears to have 4 sails, was this a standard windmill symbol or did the cartographer depict the real windmill(probably the former case)? Can´t find no written information on the windmill. The only mention is an entry in English Heritage´s pastscape site mentioned as a windmill mound with the tag post-medieval, although there´s no sign of that either. The guess is that it was a brick tower windmill like most in the West Midlands.
Below is my (amateur) mock-up of what the windmill would have looked like if it was still around, with the back drop of Windmill farm, coton green. The windmill stood at the crossroads of Comberford road and Coton lane
Below is the 1837 ordnance map (from vision of Britain) with the windmill again featured with four sails. The next maps I´ve seen in the area are 1888 ordnance maps and there’s no sign of the windmill. So can surmise that it disappeared at some point between 1837-1888. In the map below you can make out its location next to the present day Lichfield road, as mentioned before there´s no sign of a mound in this exact location( even on Lidar images) so its been ploughed under or I´m looking in the wrong location.
Abe and Ernst wanted to have a look around to get a feel for the place and see if their were any reminders of the windmill. The problem prone pair had a run in with the farm guard dog and just managed to get on the fence.
[…] Windmill Farm taken from OS OpenData showing windmill farm and windmill Close, located on outer limit of Coton Green, Tamworth, click on for larger view. This is the best candidates for Tamworth´s very own windmill. Moneymore mill is on the outer limits of this blogs area and windmill hill, Whittington is a big maybe. Windmill´s being the major landmarks they are, leave echoes in the landscape in the form of names. They seem to smother the immed … Read More […]
You are correct about the Windmill at the farm on Coton lane. We live there.
We moved to the farm about thirty years ago and a few years before that the farmer had removed the stone and clay foundations of the Windmill from the field and dragged them down to the bottom field on the farm.
My guess is that the windmill survived longer than you mentioned.
A year or two after we moved in a neighbour asked if he could have access to use his metal detector and we suggested that he try in the area around the original location of the Mill, in the field on the left of the farm drive when driving to the house. He located various coins including two Elizabethan silver shillings.
Our house is built in three sections the oldest part we think was the one up one down part timbered Millers cottage with a cellar underneath.
Thanks for that, fascinating stuff especially seeing as there’s so little info out there. So the millers cottage is incorporated into the house! Would you happen to know what happened to those stone, clay foundations of the windmill? I’ll be in touch soon by email to see if you’d like to get involved in an online event on the area to explore and share info on the area.