Site overview

Barkestone Mill is a former brick tower corn mill in Barkestone-le-Vale, within the Vale of Belvoir. It was described in 1839 as a newly erected six-storey brick tower mill with patent sails and a fantail. The mill remained in use through the nineteenth century and was still working in 1895.

By 1905 it was being powered by a 12 horsepower steam engine, marking the shift away from wind-driven milling. It had ceased functioning by 1927. The former mill later survived as a private property, and works in the early 1980s brought the old windmill fabric back into use.

The site preserves a visible survival of the village’s wind-powered corn-milling history, closely associated with the Vale of Belvoir’s canal-side and agricultural milling landscape.

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

Barkestone Mill was one of the windmills of the Vale of Belvoir and stood within a landscape where several mills were built or rebuilt during the canal age. The Grantham Canal opened new opportunities for waterborne transport, and a number of Vale mills were placed close enough to the canal to benefit from the movement of grain, flour, fuel, and agricultural produce.

The mill at Barkestone-le-Vale was advertised in 1839 as a newly erected six-storey brick tower mill. Its equipment included patent sails and a fantail, giving it the form of a substantial nineteenth-century corn mill rather than an earlier open-trestle post mill. The tower stood at The Green, where later photographs and property records continued to associate the surviving building with the old village windmill.

The mill remained active into the later nineteenth century and was still operational in 1895. By 1905, auxiliary power had become part of the working arrangement, with a 12 horsepower steam engine used to drive the mill. This change reflects the site’s final working phase, when wind power was supplemented or superseded by more dependable mechanical power. Barkestone Mill had ceased functioning by 1927.

After milling ended, the windmill fabric survived within private property. The old mill had fallen out of use by the beginning of the twentieth century, but major works in the early 1980s restored and adapted the structure. The present survival is therefore that of a converted tower mill rather than a complete working windmill. Its historic value lies in the retained tower fabric and its continued visibility as part of Barkestone-le-Vale’s former milling landscape.

Timeline

1839

Tower mill newly erected

The mill was described in 1839 as a newly erected six-storey brick tower mill with patent sails and a fantail.
1895

Mill still operational

Barkestone Mill was still working as a corn mill in the late nineteenth century.
1905

Steam power in use

A 12 horsepower steam engine was being used to power the mill by 1905.
1927

Milling function ceased

The mill had ceased functioning by 1927.
1980–1989

Mill converted and overhauled

Works in the early 1980s adapted the former windmill fabric as part of a private property.

Sources and records

Windmill World site entry
Mills Archive record
Vale of Belvoir Chronicle article on windmills of the Vale
Travel in Time article on Barkestone-le-Vale
Property particulars for The Old Windmill, Barkestone-le-Vale