Site overview
St James South Elmham Post Mill was a large post mill with a two-storey roundhouse. It was moved to the site in 1897, with Harleston and Starston both associated with accounts of its previous location. The mill had four patent sails, two pairs of stones, and a fantail.
It was demolished in June or July 1923, but the roundhouse remains and is used as a store.
Map
History
St James South Elmham Post Mill was a nineteenth-century post mill. It was a large mill with a two-storey roundhouse and was moved to St James South Elmham in 1897. One account gives Harleston as the previous location, while another associates the mill with Starston, Norfolk.
The mill was equipped with four patent sails, two pairs of stones, and a fantail. It was demolished in June or July 1923. The roundhouse survived after the loss of the buck and machinery and remains in later use as a store.
A nearby post-mill buck was removed in 1972.
Timeline
Roundhouse used as store
Post mill built
Mill moved to St James South Elmham
Mill demolished
Sources and records
Windmill World entry: St James South Elmham windmill
Norfolk Mills: Starston post mill