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| Washington Windmill | |
|---|---|
The mill in 2005 | |
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| Origin | |
| Mill name | Rock Mill |
| Grid reference | TQ 128 137 |
| Coordinates | 50°54′42″N 0°23′48″W / 50.9117°N 0.3966°W |
| Operator(s) | Private |
| Year built | 1823 |
| Information | |
| Purpose | Corn mill |
| Type | Smock mill |
| Storeys | Three store smock |
| Base storeys | Single-storey base |
| Smock sides | Eight sides |
| No. of sails | Four sails |
| Type of sails | Patent sails (missing) |
| Winding | Fantail (missing) |
| No. of pairs of millstones | Three pairs |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
| Official name | Rock Windmill |
| Designated | 24 February 1977 |
| Reference no. | 1354092 |
Rock Mill is a Grade II listed[1] smock mill at Washington, West Sussex, England, which has been converted to residential use.
Rock Mill was built in 1823.[2] The mill was working at the outbreak of the First World War but was converted to a house in about 1919, using the machinery as decoration.[3] The composer John Ireland bought the mill in 1953[2] and died there in 1962.[4] As of 2007, the mill is used as offices.[2]
Rock Mill is a three-storey smock mill on a single-storey base, formerly carrying a beehive cap winded by a fantail. It had four Patent sails and drove three pairs of millstones (two pairs French Burr and one pair of Peak stones).[3]