Site overview

Rougham Post Mill was a wind-powered post mill used for corn milling. The surviving remains consist of the trestle, with earlier material also identifying ruined roundhouse walls. The mill had become derelict by the early twentieth century, and later survival is represented by structural remains rather than a complete mill body.

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

Rougham Post Mill was a post mill used for corn milling at Rougham. By the early twentieth century the mill had become derelict, with photographs recording the buck without sails and in a deteriorating state. Later remains included the surviving trestle and ruined roundhouse walls.

The present surviving character is therefore fragmentary, consisting of structural remains from the former post mill rather than an intact working mill.

Timeline

Corn milling use

Rougham Post Mill was a post mill used for corn milling.
1922–1938

Derelict mill

The mill was derelict during the early twentieth century, with the buck later roofless and collapsing.
1972

Trestle and roundhouse remains

The surviving remains included the trestle and ruined roundhouse walls.

Sources and records

Windmill World entry: Rougham post mill
Guy Blythman Windmill Photographic Register: Rougham Green post mill