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The Old Windmill Worcestershire

The Old Windmill Worcestershire
Email: Please Click Here
Telephone: 01905 734735
Website: Please Click Here
Description
Price: Guide price: £985,000   Tenure:  Freehold

“A ONCE IN A GENERATION OPPORTUNITY TO BUY”  

A CHERISHED HISTORIC FAMILY HOME WITH MAGNIFICENT VIEWS
OFFERING VERSATILE AND LUXURIOUS FACILITIES 
TOGETHER WITH BUSINESS POTENTIAL


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A visit is essential to experience the ambience of The Old Windmill.  It is a charming and unique home comprising a converted windmill built in stone quarried from the site. 
 
The house is a listed building that has been extended to make a large and fascinating home offering versatile and luxurious accommodation.  Over the last 24 years it has served as a wonderful family home and successful provided luxury home accommodation for paying guests.  It sits on the edge of a tranquil quarry garden that is a haven for wildlife and has an excellent prospect across the Worcestershire countryside towards the Malvern and Abberley Hills.

The property occupies a private position on the edge of Inkberrow village, which offers good local facilities including parish church, primary school, health centre, village hall with sports facilities, post office, general stores and public houses. The surrounding countryside is cris-crossed with public footpaths providing endless opportunities for walking and outdoor pursuits. The Old Windmill is very well located in the Midlands with good access by road and air.  It is 12 miles from Stratford-upon-Avon and Worcester and 20 miles from Birmingham. 

The Cotswolds, Cheltenham, Warwick, the National Exhibition Centre and the Malvern Hills are all within easy reach.  There is good access to the motorway network with the M5 (Junction 6) 9 miles, M5 (Junction 7) 10 miles, M42 (Junction 2) 13 miles and M40 (Junction 15) 19 miles away.   It is 26 miles to Birmingham International Airport and Rail Station which is on the main line into Euston.  Other rail services can be found at Warwick Parkway into Marlybone, Evesham into Paddington and Worcester or Redditch into Birmingham.  Although only two and a half hours from central London by car, The Old Windmill is nevertheless a world away.

The Garden
The garden is on the side of a hill with a delightful pond at the bottom of the quarry, accessible either by steps or a path.  It is informal, well kept and designed to encourage the extensive range of wildlife that shares it.
Visiting wildlife has included fox, hare, badger and pheasant.  Residents include squirrels, bats and newts.  There are also many species of song birds including the recent return, after many years' absence, of a nesting pair of Song Thrush.  In fact we have spotted 38 species of bird in the garden over the years.

A Brief History of The Old Windmill
The Old Windmill is built on the site of a quarry that was worked by the Davis family during the eighteenth century.  The family were stonemasons from Wales who came to the district to do some work and stayed.  Much of the original boundary wall from this period, consisting of large vertical stones, still exists.  The sandstone quarried from the site was used for local house building, church renovations, and to build the church at Abberton, a nearby village.  The quarry was kept dry by pumping from a deep sump and the water supply came from an even deeper well.

The windmill is not shown on maps produced by Taylor in 1800, Greenwood in 1821, or the early Ordanance Survey map of 1834.  It is thought that the mill was built during the reign of Queen Victoria, in about 1840, using stone from the site.  It was one of about forty windmills that existed in Worcestershire during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.  It was a tower mill with a cap that supported four cloth-covered sails, a wind shaft and gears.  These connected to under-driven grinding stones that produced the flour.  The cap was rotated by hand-operated winding gear to face the wind.

The windmill went out of use in the late 1860s, perhaps as a result of competition with other local mills.  Then, during a violent storm on Trinity Sunday 1872, the sails were blown off, making its working life relatively short.  The sandstone rock beneath the tower was later excavated to a depth of 12 feet to house an engine that drove the mill once more.  This created what is now an interesting lower ground room with walls, which were once blackened, hewn from the solid rock.

One of the Davis family, Arthur Davis, was born on the 24 August 1830.  His Last Will and Testament, dating from his death on the 10 August 1883, valued the estate at £597s3d3.  He left the quarry, workshops, cottages and land between his son Abel William and his daughter Ellen Ann, who was a spinster.  After Arthur's death, however, all work stopped on the quarry.  The Inland Revenue Account for the succession duty on the property, paid by his son Abel, amounted to £14s11d8.

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, the cap, which had been left in place without the sails, was replaced with an upper floor to make a castellated turret.  In 1906, a Mr Cox acquired the mill and converted it into a residence by adding a two-storey wing to the East of the tower.  Those who knew the windmill before the alteration thought it was "quite hideous" and "dwarfs the tower completely".

Mr PF Taylor rented the quarry from Mr Cox from 1911.  Taylor was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1883 and was a monumental stonemason who had been living in the village for ten years.  He completed service in the British Army from 1915 to 1919 and then returned to buy the quarry and windmill in 1920.  Taylor built an additional single storey extension to the North of the tower in 1937.  He also re-opened the quarry for his own use, putting him in the unusual position of living on a working quarry until his retirement in the 1960s.  Mr and Mrs Taylor continued to live here with their family until they both died within two days of each other in 1972.
 
Alcester 6, Redditch 7, Pershore/Evesham 9, Droitwich 10, Worcester/Stratford-upon-Avon 12, Birmingham/Warwick 20, London 105,
M5 - 9 (approx mileage)

 
Principal Residence:
2 Reception rooms. Kitchen/Breakfast room. Snug. Gymnasium. Laundry. Shower room. Wine Cellar. 6 Bedrooms (3 en suite).

Self-Contained Annexe:
Living room. Kitchen. 2 En Suite Bedrooms.
In all around 4200 sq ft (400 sq m) GIA approx.

Wonderful quarry garden. Large ornamental pond. Outbuildings. Garage.

To view Home Cinema visit
www.andrew-grant.co.uk
For more details visit
www.theoldwindmill.co.uk
Country Homes               01905 734735      
country.homes@andrew-grant.co.uk

8 Bedrooms
14'1X12'4
14'9X9'6
15'1X9'8
19'10X9'8
13'9X9'10
13'5X11'4
14'7X10'4
11'6X11'3 

4 Receptions
24'1X15'1
21'8X20'2
15'5X10'4
16'1X12'6
Kitchen 14'3X11'11 
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