Clewer Mill Stream: Difference between revisions

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In the 1920s Clewer Mill House was the home of a Mrs Moscockle who used to dress like Queen Mary and wave regally to pedestrians from her Rolls-Royce as she was driven around Windsor.<ref name='WFB'>{{cite web|url=http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsorhistory/fire_brigade1929.htm |title=Windsor Fire Bridge |accessdate=2008-11-30 |work=Royal Windsor Web Site }}</ref>
In the 1920s Clewer Mill House was the home of a Mrs Moscockle who used to dress like Queen Mary and wave regally to pedestrians from her Rolls-Royce as she was driven around Windsor.<ref name='WFB'>{{cite web|url=http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsorhistory/fire_brigade1929.htm |title=Windsor Fire Bridge |accessdate=2008-11-30 |work=Royal Windsor Web Site }}</ref>


Clewer Mill Stream was a popular haunt of schoolboys from nearby Eton College although it was, along with the Thames itself, officially out-of-bounds and a punishment of 100 lines could be given by a sixth former to any lower boy caught "shooting <nowiki>[water birds]</nowiki> in the Clewer Stream".<ref name='Woodgate'>{{cite book | last=Woodgate | first=W.B. | authorlink=| coauthors=Harvey Mason, R | title=Boating | publisher=Longmans, Green & Co. | year=1888 | location=London | pages=201 | url=http://www.archive.org/stream/boatingb00woodrich | doi=| id=| isbn=}}</ref>
Clewer Mill Stream was a popular haunt of schoolboys from nearby [[Eton College]] although it was, along with the Thames itself, officially out-of-bounds and a punishment of 100 lines could be given by a sixth former to any lower boy caught "shooting <nowiki>[water birds]</nowiki> in the Clewer Stream".<ref name='Woodgate'>{{cite book | last=Woodgate | first=W.B. | authorlink=| coauthors=Harvey Mason, R | title=Boating | publisher=Longmans, Green & Co. | year=1888 | location=London | pages=201 | url=http://www.archive.org/stream/boatingb00woodrich | doi=| id=| isbn=}}</ref>


An account from the 1840s of life at Eton describes the thrill of sculling up the backwater to the mill, waiting until the "miller was at dinner" to carry one's skiff around the mill wheel and launch it in to the "mill-stream where it was really dangerous, above the wheel".<ref name='Coleridge'>{{cite book | last=Coleridge | first=Arthur Duke | authorlink=| coauthors=| title=Eton in the Forties by An Old Colleger | publisher=Richard Bentley | year=1896 | location=London | pages=108&ndash;109 | url=http://www.archive.org/stream/etoninforties00coleuoft | doi=| id=| isbn=}}</ref>  
An account from the 1840s of life at Eton describes the thrill of sculling up the backwater to the mill, waiting until the "miller was at dinner" to carry one's skiff around the mill wheel and launch it in to the "mill-stream where it was really dangerous, above the wheel".<ref name='Coleridge'>{{cite book | last=Coleridge | first=Arthur Duke | authorlink=| coauthors=| title=Eton in the Forties by An Old Colleger | publisher=Richard Bentley | year=1896 | location=London | pages=108&ndash;109 | url=http://www.archive.org/stream/etoninforties00coleuoft | doi=| id=| isbn=}}</ref>  

Latest revision as of 14:52, 10 January 2020

Upstream entrance to Clewer Mill Stream above Bush Ait
Clewer Mill Stream at French Brothers just above the downstream confluence
Clewer Mill Stream re-entering the main channel above Queen Elizabeth Bridge

Clewer Mill Stream is a narrow, twisting backwater of the River Thames near Windsor. It leaves the river at Bush Ait and rejoins just above Queen Elizabeth Bridge.[1] Clewer Mill Stream is named after the watermill for which it once provided power.

Clewer Mill Stream has provided a source of food, power and freshwater, safe harbour and navigable access to the Thames for the small village of Clewer since the 10th century. In 1198 the Knights Templar of Bisham granted a fishery at Clewer to Richard de Sifrewast.[2]

The corn mill at Clewer was first mentioned in the Domesday Book[2] with a value of 10 shillings[3] and there has been a building on the site ever since. In 1781 the mill burnt down and its machinery, which had been visited by George III as it was so "singular and curious", was destroyed.[3] The mill was rebuilt after the fire and although the water levels were affected following the building of the weirs at Romney and Boveney Locks, Clewer Mill was operational until the late 19th century.

In the 1920s Clewer Mill House was the home of a Mrs Moscockle who used to dress like Queen Mary and wave regally to pedestrians from her Rolls-Royce as she was driven around Windsor.[4]

Clewer Mill Stream was a popular haunt of schoolboys from nearby Eton College although it was, along with the Thames itself, officially out-of-bounds and a punishment of 100 lines could be given by a sixth former to any lower boy caught "shooting [water birds] in the Clewer Stream".[5]

An account from the 1840s of life at Eton describes the thrill of sculling up the backwater to the mill, waiting until the "miller was at dinner" to carry one's skiff around the mill wheel and launch it in to the "mill-stream where it was really dangerous, above the wheel".[6]

The 165-acre tract of land between Clewer Mill Stream and the main channel of the Thames is a meadow called The Rays[2] which has been used for horse racing meetings since 1866. It is now the site of Royal Windsor Racecourse.[7]

The upstream part of Clewer Mill Stream from Bush Ait forms the entrance channel to Windsor Racecourse Marina, providing a maximum of an 11-foot draft although this is significantly reduced during drought years. The downstream section, below the marina is unnavigable by powered craft except for a short reach from the mouth of the stream upstream to Clewer Boatyard.

References

  1. Cove-Smith, Chris (2006). The River Thames Book. Imray Laurie Norie and Wilson. ISBN 0-85288-892-9. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Ditchfield, P. H.; Page, William (1923). A History of the County of Berkshire Volume 3. pp. 72–77. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43183. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Tighe, Robert Richard; Davis, James Edward (1858). Annals of Windsor. pp. 16–17. 
  4. "Windsor Fire Bridge". Royal Windsor Web Site. http://www.thamesweb.co.uk/windsor/windsorhistory/fire_brigade1929.htm. Retrieved 2008-11-30. 
  5. Woodgate, W.B.; Harvey Mason, R (1888). Boating. London: Longmans, Green & Co.. pp. 201. http://www.archive.org/stream/boatingb00woodrich. 
  6. Coleridge, Arthur Duke (1896). Eton in the Forties by An Old Colleger. London: Richard Bentley. pp. 108–109. http://www.archive.org/stream/etoninforties00coleuoft. 
  7. "Royal Windsor Racecourse". Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead. http://www.windsor.gov.uk/site/things-to-do/royal-windsor-racecourse-p62613. Retrieved 2008-11-30.