House Magazine Spring 2000

Every Museum volunteer has their favourite task. For one of our longest-standing stewards, John Herniman, it's Lurgashall Watermill- one of the most popular exhibits with visitors - where he is now one of the regular volunteer millers.

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LURGASHALL WATERMILL

Lurgashall Mill was built in the 17th century at Lurgashall a village about four miles north of Petworth, from local stone. It used water from several streams which eventually flow into the River Rother near Halfway Bridge. The mill had been rebuilt and modified at least once in its working life.

The machinery mostly dates from the 19th century. The mill served not only the village and its locality, but also the residents of Petworth House and Park (the Leconfield Estate), and at one time it had two waterwheels, each driving independent sets of machinery. One set survives. There were two sets of grindstones to each waterwheel. It is probable that two were used to grind wheat for flour, one to mill animal feed, and one to grind oak bark used in tanning leather, a common industry in the Weald.   Up until relatively modern times, the place in the community of the miller and the mill cannot be overstated. Usually he was under the control of the Lord of the Manor.   Before the introduction of the potato from the New World in the 17th century, and later the growing popularity of rice;  wheat and its products (bread, pastry, gruel, dumplings, etc)

lurgashall watermill

was the staple food of the rural population, augmented by vegetables, poultry, rabbits and other game meat, as well as fruit, nuts, and fungi gathered from the countryside. In fact, it provided the basis of a highly nutritious diet, often washed down with ale, which (accidentally) had been 'pasteurised' during the brewing process and was, therefore, usually more healthy than water.

The mill continued to be working until 1935, grinding mainly animal feed. Like so many other village mills, its trade declined because it could not compete with the powerful companies which imported American grain and used roller mills driven firstly by steam, and later by electricity. The mill became derelict and uneconomical to repair. In 1973 the Leconfield Estate presented it to the Museum. It was then carefully dismantled, stone by stone, beam by beam, and the remains of the machinery salvaged. Before it could be rebuilt on the Museum site, it was necessary to excavate and build an upper (sealed) and a lower (unsealed) mill pond with the requisite height difference of about 12ft. This took four years, and the restoration of the machinery and the interior took a further three years. So it was a long and ambitious project, but certainly one which has paid off in terms of its popularity over the past 20 years.

lurgashall mill aerial view

Lurgashall Mill and its granary at the Museum with the upper (right) and lower ponds.

The Museum's mill is one of the few working watermills in Britain which also sells its product - stoneground wholemeal flour - now much in demand by discerning bakers in business and at home. Lurgashall Mill was reconstructed by the late John Friar and Geoff Kent. Robert Demaus was the first miller and remains the Museum's consultant millwright. The mill is now run on a daily basis by a team of volunteers trained specially for the task. Robert Demaus will continue miller training and generally supervise technical operations. Keith Bickmore looks after the business aspects and Nick Conway, the maintenance.

 

The machinery

The design concept of watermills like Lurgashall Mill has not changed for many centuries. In Norman and Medieval times the mechanism was made entirely of wood, but the basic engineering principles of the overshot water wheel and the gearing to the running grindstone drive had long been established. With the onset of iron smelting and forging skills, particularly in the Weald, parts of the machinery were replaced by iron components. In Victorian times village mills reached their most sophisticated state with wood and iron or steel working hand in hand. This is what we see in Lurgashall Mill today. The word overshot means that it is the weight of the water dropping on the top of the water wheel which causes it to rotate, not the water's velocity as in breastshot or undershot wheels, where the water hitting the paddles at speed makes the wheel rotate, as in a turbine.

The present cast-iron waterwheel was made at a foundry in Cocking to replace an earlier wooden wheel. It is 12ft in diameter and when the mill is grinding it normally turns at between 4 and 6 r.p.m., each turn using about 320 gallons of water. The gearing from the waterwheel to the shaft driving the running grindstone is 13.5 to 1, so that the running stone is turning at a speed of between 50 to 80 r.p.m. Unlike the original site at Lurgashall, there is inadequate natural surface water on the site to maintain the level in the upper pond when the mill is working. To overcome this, a powerful electric water pump re-circulates the water back to the upper pond, a lift in excess of 12ft. In Summer this must be done promptly, or the water will be lost into the ground.

In Winter, when the ground water level rises, the lower pond remains full, so the water can be retrieved at any time to restore the level of the upper pond. Occasionally in Summer it is necessary to resort to pumping from a bore-hole nearby to top up the upper pond, fortunately this is a rare occurrence ,because it is expensive. It must not be forgotten that, on its original site, the power for the mill was provided free, but the water, once used, was allowed to flow away into the natural river system, no doubt to be used again and again elsewhere. (What better example of the sustainable use of natural resources!)

The purpose of the machinery in the mill is to convert the speed and direction of the drive from the water wheel to that of the spindle driving the running stone, namely, the upper grindstone. In effect it turns the drive from horizontal to vertical, and multiplies it by 13 and a half, so that, for every turn of the water wheel, the running stone rotates 13 and a half times. The miller's main task is to see that whilst the water wheel is turning there is grain between the stones being ground to a meal. Whilst in motion the stones must never be allowed to meet. If they do, not only would the stones be damaged, but also, great heat would be generated - enough to start a fire if left more than a minute or so. This is the reason for the bell on the damsel - it warns the miller that the grain hopper is almost empty, and he must either stop the machinery, or replenish the grain in the hopper immediately. If he ignores the damsel's call, dire consequences could result.

 

lurgashall mill original location

The Mill on its original site at Lurgashall.

The flour

lurgashall mill flour advert

The water mill operates on every day that the Museum is open - daily from I March until 31 October, and three days per week during the winter. During this time about 35 tons of wheat is converted to wholemeal flour. The wheat is usually purchased from corn merchants in Chichester and occasionally from local farmers. To be acceptable for bread-making the grain must be mature, but not germinating. Its bread-making quality is tested by means of the time taken for a Plunger of given weight to compress a given quantity of paste made from the meal and water. This is called the Hagberg Falling Level, and must exceed 250 to produce a dough of suitable viscosity for bread-making. The protein content of good bread-making flour should exceed 10%.

From my own experience as a novice baker, I can say that the wholemeal flour produced by Lurgashall Mill will produce a very tasty loaf - nutty, light, and full of wheaty flavour, together with vitamins, protein, starch, and digestible fibre. Nothing extra is put in and nothing is taken away; it is a direct conversion of high quality wheat to a tasty "powder", which can be used for many other recipes apart from bread-making. There is no end to the ingenuity of the cook/baker using this wholemeal flour. Anything from dog biscuits to carrot cake and date bread is possible. Pancakes, pizza, and pasta can also be made. I suggest that, even for the novice cook/baker, this is a pastime which is far more rewarding and relaxing than sitting in front of the TV or a PC monitor!

lurgashall mill millstone dressing

Robert Demaus dressing the mill stones on one of his regular maintenance visits.

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