Site overview

Old Windmill on Elbury Lane, Broadclyst, is a Grade II listed windmill tower built in 1786 by Sam Flood, a baker. The round red sandstone tower is stuccoed and has a slate conical roof, with the original cap and gear missing. The mill bears a stone inscription recording its erection in 1786 and the phrase “Vive le Ingenie”.

It was described in 1808 with two pairs of stones and a bolting mill, and was associated with Samuel Flood’s milling interests before his bankruptcy in 1815. The windmill was later converted into flats in about 1870, after a fire in Broadclyst, when three floors and a chimney were added. The tower forms a group with the former miller’s cottage, now Windmill Cottage.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

Old Windmill stands on Elbury Lane at Broadclyst. The tower was built in 1786 by Sam Flood, a baker, and is one of the best recorded surviving windmill towers in Devon. It is a round red sandstone tower, stuccoed externally and now roofed with a slate conical roof. The original windmill cap and working gear have gone, but the tower retains its clear milling form.

A stone inscription on the south side records the building of the mill in 1786 and includes the phrase “Vive le Ingenie”. The mill was associated with Samuel Flood, who also leased Clyston Watermill. In 1808 the windmill was described with two pairs of stones and a bolting mill, indicating its corn-milling equipment. Local mill history also records the path made by the donkey said to have turned the machinery on windless days, preserving a detail of auxiliary working practice within the building’s story.

The windmill’s working life ended in the early nineteenth century. A lease was offered for sale in 1814 when the miller was bankrupt, and Samuel Flood was declared bankrupt in 1815. The mill fell out of use around that time. The building then entered a long post-milling phase. In about 1870 it was converted into flats to house people made homeless after a serious fire in Broadclyst. Three floors and a chimney were added during this conversion, while the sails and machinery were removed.

Old Windmill was listed at Grade II on 11 November 1952. Later surveys record the tower as standing as a shell, then as a stuccoed four-floor structure with cap and gear missing. It forms a group with the former miller’s cottage, now Windmill Cottage. The surviving tower preserves the form of an eighteenth-century Devon tower mill together with later evidence of domestic conversion and community reuse.

Timeline

1786

Tower windmill built

The windmill tower was built by Sam Flood, a baker, with a dated stone inscription on the south side.
1808

Milling machinery recorded

The windmill was described with two pairs of stones and a bolting mill.
1814

Lease offered for sale

A lease was offered for sale while the miller was bankrupt.
1815

Windmill fell out of use

Samuel Flood was declared bankrupt and the windmill fell out of use around 1815.
1870

Converted into flats

The former windmill was converted into flats after a fire in Broadclyst, with three floors and a chimney added.
1952

Grade II listed

Old Windmill on Elbury Lane was listed at Grade II.
1982

Tower shell recorded

The windmill was recorded as a standing shell.
2000

Four-floor tower recorded

The tower was recorded as a stuccoed structure with a slate conical roof, four floors and the cap and gear missing.

Sources and records

Historic England listed building entry
Devon and Dartmoor Historic Environment Record
Windmill World site entry
Mills Archive site record
National Trust Killerton Estate building survey
Minchinton, Windmills of Devon