Kings Langley Mill, Kings Langley
A electricity-, steam- and water-powered corn mill in the historic county of Hertfordshire, England.
See related images and documents.
See images only.
This is likely to be the site of the mill at Kings Langley mentioned in the Domesday book. In 1763 it passed to the Surrey family and in 1788 to the Toovey family. In 1894 a steam engine and roller mill plant were installed, and later the waterwheel was replaced with turbines. The mill ceased milling flour for bread in 1938 and became a feed mill. It was demolished in 1978
Full details
Alternative names | Toovey's Mill |
Power source | Electricity, Steam, Water |
Mill type | Roller flour mill, Watermill |
River | Gade |
Mill function | Corn mill |
Archive ID | 12701 |
Location | Kings Langley |
Historic county | Hertfordshire |
Country | England, United Kingdom |
NGR | TL 0744 0297 |
Latitude/longitude | 51.71529909, -0.44389968 |
Location
Gallery
References
- Dean, Lewis, "The history of King's Langley Mill" (Watford and District Industrial History Society, 1, 1971)
- Howes, Hugh, Wind, water and steam: The story of Hertfordshire's mills (University of Hertfordshire Press, 2016), pp. 85-7, 220-2, 238
- Ordnance Survey 25 inch map, Hertfordshire XXXVIII.4 (1898)
Missing information? Click here to tell us about this mill.