Country Cottage Accommodation in East Anglia. History

Mendham Mill
Mendham
Harleston
Norfolk
IP20 0NN

Telephone:
01379 855282

Mendham Mill Mendham Mill History

There has been a watermill on this site in Mendham for over 1000 years - a mill here was mentioned in the Doomsday Book. The current building dates from 1800 with later additions and ceased life as a working mill in the early 1930's. A sluicegate under the building still operates to control the flow of water under the wheel which remains in place although it no longer turns. It was the largest wheel on the Waveney when it was installed in 1861. There is a history of Mendham Mill at the excellent Norfolk Mills website.

The painter Sir Alfred Munnings was born in The Miller's House in 1878. Many of his early paintings and drawings are of the mill and its surroundings. He was elected President of the Royal Academy of Art in 1944 and was knighted in the same year. He was an outspoken champion of realist, or representational art believing, for example, that 'If you paint a tree - for God's sake make it look like a tree...' There is little doubt that the beauty of his childhood home shaped his approach to art. He loved Mendham Mill, especially the river and wrote extensively and passionately about it in his autobiography.

After milling ceased in 1932 the whole estate was purchased for £1600 by Grace Philcox who poured £20,000 into converting the main 'factory' part of the mill into a home. This was an enormous sum to spend at that time and scandalized many in the county who heard about it! The work was of excellent quality and has stood the test of time. She created further scandal some years later by running off with her chauffeur! 

In 2006 the future of Mendham Mill was in doubt after it was acquired, along with its outbuildings and land, by a property development company. It might have been spilt up into a number of apartments with part of the land used for new housing. Instead, we bought the entire property in 2008 turning it back into a home while also creating four luxurious holiday cottages which make the most of this exceptional setting. We love this property and enjoy sharing this magical estate with our visitors.



Memories of the River - Sir Alfred Munnings

My home was on a river. The Waveney, which divides Norfolk from Suffolk. Now, when I'm often far from it, my one desire is to find time, which I never can, to write about it browse back on the past, to picture its lovely mills, each in turn, and lastly one of the largest on the river - our mill where we lived......

Until I pass out I shall always long for the river and the warblers' song going on and on, and now and then the wind through the willows turning the surface blue and purple. - Then comes the first breath of autumn, and the willows, still whiten, and the lines of the wooded horizons are dark and lowering, and the glory of the river-herbs is dying, and the long, decaying stalks of river-parsley lie yellow, straggling along the current, caught up by some standing rushy clump, sending the stream in wrinkles, and leaving eddies on either side........

I lived to the hum of its grinding. The summer time, blue river and the yellow, flooded, roaring monster of winter, and all its happenings were part of our lives........

What didn't we do on that peaceful river? When shoals of cut water-weed lay against 'the rack' as we called it, which stretched across from bank to bank above the weir and kept all floating weed from going down to the mill, we fished for perch from that old boat gazing down into the dark amber depths as the worm swung in the current below. We fished for roach and dace, we found moorhens' nests with their eggs, and in the reeds, small nests of reed warblers. Their continual song was a background to our frolics and adventures.

 

Gallery.

  • Water flowing past the 1860's wheel

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