Site overview

Framlingham smock mill survives as the converted base of a former wind-powered corn mill. The structure is known as The Round House. It is an octagonal whitewashed brick mill base with a conical thatched roof and central octagonal chimney stack, linked to an oblong wing.

The base was extended and converted to a house in the early nineteenth century and is listed Grade II.

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

Framlingham smock mill was a wind-powered corn mill at TM 283 632. The surviving structure is the former base, later known as The Round House. The octagonal base was built of whitewashed brick and was extended and converted to a house in the early nineteenth century.

Its domestic conversion gave it a conical thatched roof, overhanging eaves, and a central octagonal chimney stack. An oblong wing with a slate roof was added, and the rear retained two-light cast-iron casements with square leaded panes and pointed heads. The former mill base was listed Grade II on 25 October 1951.

The original working superstructure, cap, sails, and machinery no longer survive.

Timeline

Smock corn mill

The Framlingham site was a wind-powered smock corn mill.
1800–1832

Converted to a house

The octagonal smock mill base was extended and converted to a house in the early nineteenth century.
1951

Listed Grade II

The Round House was listed Grade II on 25 October 1951.

Sources and records

Historic England National Heritage List entry: Round House, Framlingham
Mills Archive mill record: Smock mill, Framlingham
Windmill World entry: Framlingham windmill
Suffolk Mills Group windmill gazetteer