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NGR: TL590665Stevens' Mill: tower mill function:Corn mill - newly tarred in 2004, restored 2014







Entry in Mills Archive database - #2395 - Stevens' Mill, Burwell (has photos) Heritage Partner
[English Heritage]Stevens' Mill which is located next to the Museum was built around 1820. There was an older mill on the same site previously, foundations of it were discovered during excavations in the ground floor in 2013.
Stevens' Mill was owned and run by several generations of the Stevens family, producing flour and animal feeds up to the mid 1950’s when it closed. By this time the mill was only producing animal feeds for local farmers. The mill and the adjacent field were then sold to a local construction firm a few years later.
There was a lot of opposition to the possible demolition of the mill, this never happened due to it being a Grade II* listed building. The developers sold the mill to the local council who in turn sold it to a preservation trust.
The trust then started the enormous task of restoring the mill. The mill was in quite a bad state as about 15 years had passed since the mill closed and probably more than that since any maintenance was done.
The mill is a clunch built tower windmill with four storeys, tarred over. It has a vertically boarded cap with a fantail which turn into the wind, and it has four patent shuttered sails. Inside the mill are 3 pairs of stones, sack hoist, grain cleaning machine and dressing machine. The millstones are all under-driven.
The sails and fantail had rotted badly, the wooden cap also was rotten and was letting rain water in. Fortunately the rest of the machinery was in fairly good condition. The cap was rebuilt with an aluminium sheet skin instead of a wooden one as it is now virtually maintenance free. A local firm of carpenters rebuilt the sails using measurements from the old ones.
The length of a pair of sails from tip to tip is actually more than the height of the mill. As the sails are attached to the mill in the halfway point between each pair and over 40 feet above the ground the end of a sail at its lowest position is slightly above the height of the top of the doors on the ground floor.
The mill is owned by Burwell Museum Trust and is Grade II* Listed.
[Biglobe]
| Last updated 13/02/2026 | Text and images © Mark Berry, 1997-2026 - |