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Aston Brook Mill

gingerjon

GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN R.I.P.
A bit of Aston History

The Aston Brook mills were built to supply industrial power from the start. Work Mill (Aston Brook Mill and other names) was engaged in cloth-fulling by 1532, and Aston Furnace began operations in 1615, its bellows worked by water. A leat which may have been a natural channel fed a long narrow pool. John Jennens of Erdington Hall owned the Furnace and another at Bromford, producing 400 tons of pig iron annually from the two. After a hundred and fifty years of dumping the spoil bank between tailrace and brook was half the size of the pool. (Some of the clinker was used by Richard Ford to build 'Hockley Abbey', a folly ruin, about 1780). Spooner and Wright, at the Furnace, were using a Newcomen engine after 1768, because the brook's supply was inadequate. Matthew Boulton was having the same trouble at Soho Works upstream: at both sites steam power was used to pump water back to the headpool for continued re-use by the wheels. The Furnace was blown out in 1783. A steam-powered papermill was at work on the site in 1833, and for about five years from 1845 the premises were used for wire-drawing. By 1865 the firm had moved to new buildings in Alma Street, still called 'Aston Furnace Mills'. The old works had been demolished by 1887: they had stood at the dip on Porchester Street. Crocodile Works now occupies the millsite.
Aston Brook Mill stood just above the Lichfield Road ford, south of Phillips Street. The Expressway now cuts right through its site. It was a fulling mill in 1532 and 1585. On Beighton's map of 1725 it is called Bourn Work Mill. In 1758 it was Gisbourn's and in 1791 Hooper's Mill. At about that time it may have reverted to corn-grinding when the shortage of waterpower locally for that purpose made it profitable. Water was very scarce: fifty-odd mills were hoarding it within the area of the modern City. By 1830 waterpower had perforce been supplemented. Bourn Mill was steam-powered for timber cutting and turning, while still using its waterwheels for corn. A disastrous fire in 1862 brought its working life to an end, and the buildings were demolished when local streets were built. Steel's Mill, shown as 'Blade Mill' by Beighton, was fed by a leat from the brook. No pool is marked on the 1758 map, and though little power was needed for edging blades and tools there was probably too little even for that without a reserve. In the 1780s the Fazeley Canal cut across its site, which today would be at the Wharf Street/ Wainwright Street corner. No windmills have been mapped in Aston. If one existed, the obvious site would be on the summit south of the Hall.

explanation (a mill for fulling cloth as by means of pesties or stampers, which alternately fall into and rise from troughs where the cloth is placed with hot water and fuller's earth, or other cleansing materials.)
 
Aston Brook Mill was mentioned in the Thread “Vine Inn, Lichfield Road, Aston,” and as it was of great antiquity it perhaps deserves a Thread of its own. There is a description from British History Online, but I think we may be able to add more to the history....

“ASTON MILL with its pool lay on a southern branch of the Tame north-east of Aston Church. It was probably the mill in Aston mentioned in Domesday Book. (fn. 45) The mill is mentioned in the late 13th and early 14th centuries, (fn. 46) and again in the 16th century. (fn. 47) Simon Othen was miller in 1574 (fn. 48) and William Stirrop in 1614. (fn. 49) It was mentioned with the manor in 1656. (fn. 50) Between 1718 and 1720 Daniel Saunders was the tenant. (fn. 51) At this time the mill was paying more than twice the tithe owed by the neighbouring mills in Castle Bromwich, Deritend, and Bordesley. (fn. 52) In 1762 it was leased for 21 years to Thomas Hooper. (fn. 53) The building marked as 'George Bicknell's' on the canal map of 1791 may be Aston Mill. (fn. 54) Between 1818 and 1828-9 it was held by James Collins. (fn. 55) In 1833 the premises were said to be both owned and occupied by the Birmingham Waterworks Company. (fn. 56) From 1845 to 1860 Thomas James was the tenant of the company at the mill, which was still a water corn mill, (fn. 57) but by 1887 the mill had disappeared and there was a pumping station on the site. (fn. 58)”

Mike’s Tythe Map on the Vine Thread shows the Mill around 1845, and the 1887/8 OS Map shows the area had changed

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BHO says the Mill had disappeared by 1887, and the reason may have been the great fire of June 1862? It was supposed that the Mill was to be rebuilt.

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BHO says the Mill had disappeared by 1887, and the reason may have been the great fire of June 1862? It was supposed that the Mill was to be rebuilt.

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It seems that Aston Mill carried on after 1862. Royal Insurance had met the claim quickly and Mr Evans tried to rebuild to the same specifications. In 1879 Mr Edward Evans of Highfields, Slade Lane, Gravelly Hill, and also of Aston Brook Mill, was bankrupt. He was also of the firm J and E Evans, paper manufacturer, Porchester Street, Summer Lane.
 
very interesting thread pedro..it seems the flour mill was on the corner of phillips st and thomas st which seems to now be industrial units....phillips st has been shortened some what now...for members who have not used this map site before just slide the blue dot for the overlay map ..obviously pool st was named after the pool near to the mill...note the mill is still marked on the 1892 map below but maybe not in use

https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=18&lat=52.4956&lon=-1.8886&layers=168&b=1
 
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From a thread. here, by Bill Dargue detailing Birmingham place names:

Aston Brook, also known as Hockley Brook and, nearer its source as The Bourn or River Bourn, runs from Hockley east-west to join the Rea and Tame; it was culverted from the 19th century and is only visible in one or two places including its confluence near Spaghetti Junction. Aston Brook Mill was a fulling mill from at least 1532 until the late 18th century when it became a corn mill operating until c1914. The millpool was in the Pool Street/ Phillips Street area.
 
thanks alan that confirms why the mill was still marked on the 1892 map and that pool st was named after the nearby pool...shame that such an old mill ended up with industrial units being plonked on it and for all we know there could still be bits of it left underground..as is with aston furnace..most of the furnace lies intact under the yellow park along side porchester st but thats another story

lyn
 
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Oh! well, Lyn, those tin sheds, if that is what they are, only have a short lifetime so maybe - if it is brought to the attention of the cities archaeologists - a through dig might take place at a future date. After all what lies beneath the ground probably isn't moving anywhere.
 
Here is an interesting letter to the Birmingham Daily Post in April 1939 from a descendant of the Evans family, AMP Evans, telling us about the families involvement in the mills of Birmingham. It backs up Mike’s suggestion concerning the Philips street name....

It also says the Mill was finally demolished in 1907, which disagrees with Bill Dargue’s suggestion that it worked until c1914.

A52F9BBB-301E-41CE-91D2-DB24C9AD0517.jpeg
 
Oh! well, Lyn, those tin sheds, if that is what they are, only have a short lifetime so maybe - if it is brought to the attention of the cities archaeologists - a through dig might take place at a future date. After all what lies beneath the ground probably isn't moving anywhere.

oh i live in hope alan...just to go quickly back to aston furnace....i did approach TIME TEAM as a possible future dig for them..this was about 8 years back...received a reply but unfortunately nothing came of it...never mind ehh...our dad always said "if you dont ask you dont get"
 
The 1913 and 1902 OS Maps...the earlier showing the Flour mill...this may endorse the letter saying it was demolished in 1907?

EAB60872-1A83-4045-9B0B-EA0121A66F60.jpeg EFF77827-E0A6-4781-B71C-6C161159DD4B.jpeg
 
Been looking at flour mill history in archived newspapers and these are a few points I found:

1834 Aston Brook Steam Flour Mill - on Lichfield Road, advertised to let. Had five pairs of millstones.
1862 mill destroyed by fire. Four storeys high. Owned by Mr John Evans. Situated on Phillip Street, Aston Road. Aston Brook ran through mill yard.
Rebuilding was mentioned at the time of the fire.
1879 Edward Evans, miller, filed petition for liquidation.

Viv.
 
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