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William Morris

Merton Abbey Mills

Surrey Iron Railway

Brewing

The Calico People

Snuff

Lavender and Mint

Dyes

Mills

Merton Priory

De Morgan

Wandle Portrayed

Research

The Wandle Mills

The Wandle Mills

The River Wandle has been used by people living along its banks since prehistoric times. First as a source of water and fish and later as a source of power to drive water wheels. It has never been navigable and so would not have been used for transport.

The first kind of mills using water power were mills with the wheel lying horizontally in the river with the mill stradling the river. If this kind of mill was used along the Wandle no evidence of one has been found.
Mills using vertical wheels were recorded by the greeks and romans.
There is no definitive evidence of when the Wandle became used as a power source for corn mills, but there were certainly mills along its banks in Anglo-Saxon times. 13 mills were recorded in the Doomsday Book. Over the years the number of industries using the Wandle increased. In its heyday (18th &19th centuries) there were probably between 49 and 51 working mills on the Wandle.

If walking the Merton Section of the Wandle Trail then why not use the IZI Travel app and learn about the mills on that section. You can also view the information while at home as well as while walking the path.Visit the Merton Mills page.

More detailed information about the mills may be found by following the link below:

Peter Mcgow’s Notes on the Mills of the River Wandle