High Salvington windmill, Sussex 🌍


High Salvington #2581

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(50.84863,-0.4065)


Map/aerial photo of the area around the mill

Post mill function:Corn mill - restored and workable

Book cover: Windmills and watermills, photographic memories, undated
author Anthony Bryan
[details] [drawing] [photo] [photo] [details] [details] [Sompting Village Morris] [photo]

Entry in Mills Archive database - #2581 - High Salvington Windmill, High Salvington (has photos) Heritage Partner

The tarred post mill at High Salvington, once known as Durrington Mill, stands 320ft (98m) above sea level, adjacent to Mill Lane, an old roadway into Worthing, and commands a fine view south over Worthing and the sea.

High Salvington Mill has a long history, probably being built about 1750, although the first map showing a mill on this site was printed in 1724. The historical record indicates that a previous mill existed on this site in 1615.

The present mill worked for nearly 150 years until it was closed in 1897. In 1907/8 the old timber roundhouse was replaced with an octagonal concrete structure with large windows that was used as a tea room well into the 1950s.

Worthing Borough Council purchased the mill for £2,250 in 1959. Edwin Hole &Son, millwrights, of Burgess Hill, undertook restoration work in the early 1960s, replacing a lot of the heavy timberwork in the main body of the mill.

As a result of damage sustained during a gale in 1976, an inspection was carried out and revealed that the state of the mill was far from well. The High Salvington Mill Trust was inaugurated and a decision taken to completely restore the mill.

The hurricane of 1987 gave the mill its first taste of renewed life. The great wind turned the single pair of sails for the first time, although the brake was on!

The original style of circular roundhouse, visible in several old photographs and postcards, was reinstated in 1990, and the mill began grinding again on 4th April 1991.

Inside the mill are two pairs of millstones set in a head-and-tail arrangement, driven by an enormous renewed brake wheel and the original tail wheel. The windshaft is of wood, with a cast-iron poll end, and carries two spring-shuttered sails and two canvas-spread common sails.

The mill is cared for by The High Salvington Mill Trust Ltd.

Muggeridge Collection photos

[RoughWood] [RoughWood]

High Salvington Windmill [2018-11-26] - HD

Chris Thomas-Atkin

High Salvington post mill, Furze Road, Worthing [2009-09-25] - HD

Jo and Steve Turner

High Salvington Windmill [2013-06-30]

Simon Carey

High Salvington Post Mill [2011-10-05] - HD

Dave Spicer

Entrance to High Salvington Post Mill [2011-10-05] - HD

Dave Spicer

High Salvington Windmill near Worthing [2011-01-09] - HD

nick macneill

High Salvington Windmill [2005-04-16]

Pam Brophy

High Salvington Windmill [2005-04-16]

Pam Brophy

Geograph images are licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike licence
[Listed Building]

Associated charity HIGH SALVINGTON MILL TRUST LIMITED Charitable company Website

Heritage Lottery Fund - £28000 : 11 Feb 1997 : High Salvington Windmill Site

Instagram

A Smartmolen equipped mill - dashboard

Wikipedia entry

News item: Good news at High Salvington (27/2/12)
News item: Sussex mill events for 2004 (6/1/04)
News item: Morris dancers at High Salvington mill (14/10/03)
News item: Calendars for 2004 featuring windmills (13/10/03)

Flickr images are copyright their individual photographers.
13 images courtesy of Tripadvisor.
2 Facebook images

Images from Historic England - hover over image to see copyright info, and to enable zoom
Durrington Or Salvington Mill / The Mill
Durrington Or Salvington Mill, Furze Road, Worthing, West Sussex
10 Sep 2000 - Photograph (Digital)
From the Images of England project


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Last updated 13/02/2026 Text and images © Mark Berry, 1997-2026 -