Site overview
Rattlesden tower mill, also known as Hitchcock's Tower Mill, is a former wind-powered corn mill at Rattlesden, Suffolk. It is a small five-storey tower mill built in the mid nineteenth century by John Whitmore. The mill had four patent sails, an ogee cap, a fantail, and two pairs of millstones.
It ceased work in 1935 and was later dismantled. The tower still stands, though the cap and around four feet of brickwork are missing. One pair of stones remains, together with much of the gearing.
The mill is conserved but disused, preserving a significant part of its former internal machinery.
Map
History
Rattlesden tower mill, or Hitchcock's Tower Mill, was built in the mid nineteenth century by John Whitmore. It was a five-storey tower mill used for corn milling. The working mill had four patent sails, an ogee cap, and a fantail, with machinery arranged to drive two pairs of millstones.
It ceased work in 1935 and was subsequently dismantled. Later records describe the tower as standing with the cap and about four feet of brickwork missing. Although no longer complete, the survival is more than a bare shell: one pair of stones remains, and most of the gearing also survives.
Photographs from the twentieth century record the mill before and after its decline, including views with its cap and sail details, and later views of the capless tower. The site remains a conserved but disused former tower corn mill.
Timeline
Tower mill built
Milling ceased
Sources and records
Windmill World entry: Rattlesden windmill
Suffolk Mills Group visit notice: Rattlesden Tower Windmill
Windmill Photographic Register entry: Rattlesden, Hitchcock's Mills
Historic England archive photograph: Tower Mill, Brettingham Road, Rattlesden