Site links:
Home | Old Britain | Aerial photographs | Rides and Walks | Football Photographs | Football Ground Photographs | Miscellaneous Photographs | Running Photographs | Live Music Photographs | Use of my photographs | Videos | CTFC History | Products | Other Services | Crack an Excel VBA password | Contact |  

 

Ifield Steam Mill

By Ian Mulcahy 

Old Britain Home | Historic curiosities of Crawley

 

Ifield Steam Mill is a three storey (plus attic) brick building which is weatherboarded on the upper floors which stands almost in the centre of Ifield Green, just to the north of Ifield Cricket Club's pavillion, and has the distinction of being the only surviving early Victorian Industrial building in Crawley.  It was built sometime between 1841 & 1855 by James Bristow who had been assigned the land by the lord of Ifield Manor. Bristow was also the owner/occupier (and presumably miller) of the earlier windmill which was also sited on Ifield Green, a few yards to the east of the Steam Mill.

 

The mill was a flour mill and was operated by a steam engine and boiler. Of course, a steam engine required a ready supply of water and this was sourced from a 30 metre well, which was dug directly underneath the engine, and three outlying wells through which surplus hot water circulated for cooling before returning to the principal well ready for use again.  It is said that the housewives of the village used to catch some of the hot water as it left the mill to start it's cooling circuit to do their laundry. It seems likely that the three outer wells were near the pond that was roughly where the current gated entrance to the site is. It is said that the pond was also used to hold cooling water. Was this where the weekly wash was performed?

 

A local builder, Stephen Warren (b. 1842), helped to install the steam engine in 1856 when he was just 14. According to an interview given to the Crawley Observer, Warrens great-grandson, Don Warren, was told by his parents that Stephen built the Royal Oak, a stones throw to the north east of the mill, and that the ironstone used to construct the front wall of the pub was quarried from pits on Ifield Green. It is likely that these 'pits' were the wells used by the steam mill.

 

Science Museum records tell us that the mill was working until 1914. In the 1950's, the Crawley Development Corporation purchased the land and the mill in order to preserve it and in 1956 passed it to the then Crawley Urban District Council. The boiler chimney at the north end of the mill and the pond survived until the early 1960's when the chimney was declared unsafe and demolished, with the rubble being used to fill in the pond which was deemed to be a danger to children!

 

In 1959, T.S. Courageous, a unit of the Nautical Training Corps adopted the mill as their base and there they stayed until the 1980's when the rising costs of maintenace proved to be too high and they moved out. Plans to turn the mill into a craft centre also went awry after the now Crawley Borough Council terminated the lease due to the tenant failing to fulfil repair and maintenance requirements. The building is now privately owned and is being converted into a private abode.

 

As a footnote, the original steam engine used by the boiler is now in the custody of the Verkehr & Technik Museum in Berlin, having been passed to it on a long term loan by the Science Museum. In a note to the Crawley Museum from the Science Museum, the engine is described as 'the only engine of this type and age that we have in the collection'.

 












Text & photographs © Ian Mulcahy. Contact photos@iansapps.co.uk or visit my 'Use of my photographs' page for licensing queries.

Sources:

Looking Back At Crawley (Karen Dunn)
Sussex Industrial History Issue 32 (Ron Martin)
National Library of Scotland (http://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/)



Pictures taken with




Some books related to the history of Crawley