Site overview
Thelnetham Windmill is a four-storey tower corn mill built in 1819 as a replacement for a post mill on the same site. It worked until the mid-1920s, when a tailwind damaged the sails. The mill became derelict, was bought for preservation in 1979, and was restored over eight years.
Milling recommenced in 1985. It was gifted to the Suffolk Building Preservation Trust in 2013 and remains maintained in operational order.
Map
History
Thelnetham Windmill was built in 1819 as a small four-storey tower mill, replacing an earlier post mill on the same site. Its original machinery was mainly wooden, but in 1832 the mill was extensively altered with the introduction of iron machinery. The mill worked until a tailwind damaged the sails in the mid-1920s.
It stood derelict for many years, and in 1976 the cap was blown to pieces in a gale. Five Suffolk Mills Group members bought the derelict mill and an acre of land in 1979. Restoration took eight years and was carried out largely by volunteers.
Milling recommenced in 1985. The tarred tower retains a beehive-shaped cap, an eight-bladed fantail painted red, white, and blue, double-shuttered patent sails, two pairs of French burr stones, a wooden upright shaft, and an engine-driven hurst on the ground floor. In 2013 the mill was gifted to the Suffolk Building Preservation Trust.
Timeline
Machinery altered
Sails damaged
Cap blown apart
Bought for preservation
Mill listed
Milling recommenced
Gifted to preservation trust
Sources and records
Mills Archive mill database entry
Historic England National Heritage List entry
Visit Bury St Edmunds business directory
Visit Bury St Edmunds heritage article
Wikipedia article: Thelnetham Windmill