Site overview
Lawson's Mill at Shepeau Stow is a late eighteenth-century tower corn mill. The Grade II listed structure is a four-storey tarred red-brick tower, missing its cap and roof, with dogtooth eaves, segment-headed openings, and visible remains of machinery. The mill originally had four sails and worked by wind until the 1920s.
By the mid 1930s it had lost its roof and become ruinous. Surviving fabric includes collapsed upper floors and machinery partly visible through ground-floor openings, including a pair of stones beneath rubble and wood.
Map
History
Lawson's Mill stands at Shepeau Stow on the north-east edge of Whaplode parish. It is a late eighteenth-century tower corn mill built of tarred red brick. The four-storey tower is roofless and has lost its cap and sails, but the dogtooth eaves and the rhythm of segment-headed door and window openings preserve the original form of the structure.
The mill originally worked with four sails and continued wind-powered operation until the 1920s. A photograph from the inter-war period records the mill before its later ruinous condition, and by the middle of the 1930s the roof had gone. The listed description records surviving technical evidence inside the tower: collapsed upper floors, partly visible machinery, a pair of stones buried beneath rubble and timber, and the former clasp-arm great spur wheel arrangement.
Drive belt wheels survive on the south side above and below the ground-floor opening, indicating later mechanical adaptation. The tower remains a prominent fragment of the hamlet's milling history.
Timeline
Four-sailed mill recorded
Wind working ended
Mill became roofless
Mechanical working ended
Listed building designation
Sources and records
Windmill World site entry: Shepeau Stow windmill
Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology photograph catalogue
Geograph photograph records: Lawson's Mill, Shepeau Stow
Wikishire article: Shepeau Stow