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Willaston Windmill |
There are
records of a mill on the site of Willaston
Windmill (on the left) on Mill Lane back to 1321.
Windmills were dangerous places and there are
several recorded deaths in Cheshire as a result
of being hit by the sails, including a Margaret
Palin here at Willaston in 1774. The present
structure, built of recycled materials from the
previous mill, dates from 1800. At 80ft (24m)
high, it was the largest of the Wirral windmills.
It became disused following storm damage in 1930
and was restored and converted for residential
purposes in 1958. One of the millstones now
dominates the village sign on the Little
Green. |
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The Gibbet Mill, Great
Saughall |
The Gibbet
Mill (on the right) takes its name from a
murder that took place in the vicinity. In 1750,
four Irish harvesters were travelling to Parkgate
on their way back to Ireland, when three of them
attacked the fourth and killed him. They robbed
the body of money and clothes and deposited the
corpse in a ditch. They made the mistake of
spending some of their booty in a local inn,
where they were caught. During the assize trial,
one of the murderers gave evidence against his
companions, who were subsequently hanged at
Boughton. The two bodies were hung up in irons
near the Two Mills on the heath as a
warning to their countrymen, who had recently
been causing trouble in that part of the country.
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The present
windmill is probably of a slightly later date,
possibly the 1770s, but it has acquired the
sobriquet nonetheless. The mill continued to
grind corn until 1926. After falling into ruin,
it was restored and is now a private house. |
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