Tonedale Mills
History
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the Were family of Wellington began producing serge as a cottage industry. Edward Fox married Anna Were, and their son Thomas Fox (1747-1821) soon took over the company. The wool industry thrived in areas used for sheep farming, like Somerset, and Taunton serge was particularly popular due to its balance between being light-weight and yet sufficiently thick. The Were family had a fulling mill at the site of Tone Works by 1750, and over the next seventeen years, the family's assets quadrupled as the industry thrived. Thomas Fox, after learning the trade in Germany and the Netherlands for three years, entered the business in 1768, became a partner in 1772 and sole proprietor in 1796, renaming the company and introduced the 'FOX' cloth mark. It was renamed Fox Brothers in 1826. The technological breakthroughs of the late 18th century revolutionised textile manufacture. In the 1790s, Thomas Fox purchased a complex of buildings in Tonedale known variously as the 'Old Town Mills' or the 'Old Flour Mills' to centralise their processes. This move facilitated an increase in both quality and quantity, while cutting costs as other production was brought in-house; basket weaving, joinery, book binding and metalworking was all carried out on the site.
The site is notable for having remains of each phase of power generation: water, steam and electricity, as when steam power was introduced, Fox Brothers opted to retain their water management system as it might prove useful. The site was continually growing through the nineteenth century, and at its peak employed around 3,600 people around Wellington, and produced 6,500 metres (21,300 ft) of material each day. At the Tonedale complex, dyers working for Fox Brothers developed a khaki dye which was worn by the British soldiers in the Second Boer War. The complex was the largest woollen mill in South West England, and was rare in integrating ancillary processes on the same site. The mill continued to produce cloth on a large scale until it downsized in the 1980s. Most of the site is now abandoned, though parts are still used for small-scale production, and others have been sold off and converted into a small industrial estate. In 1994 the last Fox family house in Wellington Tone Dale House of 1807 was fully restored by Ben and Victoria Fox; Ben is the great-great-great-great-grandson of Thomas Fox. Tone Dale House (since 1996) is now run as an events and hire venue, for house parties, weddings and corporate events, through their company The Big House Co. In 2009, Deborah Meaden and Douglas Cordeaux invested in Fox Brothers, allowing production to continue at Tonedale, after the company had been in danger of falling into bankruptcy.
Mill complex
Tone Works
Tone Works, a few hundred metres further north from Tonedale Mills, was developed as the cloth finishing works and dye works. Sitting on the banks of the River Tone, the mills originally used water wheels on the river for power generation, the housing for which are still in place. Later with the introduction of steam and then electric power, the water was used as part of the cloth finishing process, and was managed more carefully with the introduction of a reservoir and sluice gates. Within the reservoir, the water was treated before its use. The finishing works and dye works were both on this site. The former had a boiler house attached, while the latter had an engine house added.
Tonedale Mills
While the Tone Works site was able to use water wheels on the River Tone for power generation, Tonedale Mills initially used smaller watercourses, Westford Brook and Rockwell Green Stream. In order to ensure that they had a constant supply of water, and that it was used as efficiently as possible, Thomas Fox had water basins excavated between 1801 and 1803, establishing a series of waterways, weirs and sluices to manage the water supply. The original timber mill burned down in 1821, and was replaced by a brick mill, which remains today. The large site features a number of mills, warehouses, workshops and engine houses. Like the north site, evidence of water wheels as well as steam and electric power generation remains. The complex features factories for the preparation of the wool, including a combing shed and a wool cleaning complex.
Regeneration
Plans to convert some of the site into housing were abandoned in 2008, during the global financial crisis, due to low levels of interest. Development on the site was later supported by The Prince's Regeneration Trust, and the site was listed on the Heritage at Risk Register in 2010, while the Tone Works site was identified in 2014 as being among the top ten Heritage at Risk "priority" sites in the South West. Most of the site has been grade II* listed, granting it a level of preservation by Historic England, though the organisation accept that "comprehensive restoration and reuse would not prove commercially viable" due to the size and state of disrepair of the site.
Further reading
- Mike Williams, Textile Mills of South West England (Swindon: English Heritage, 2013), pp. 110-122
- Mike Williams and Lucy Jessop, Tone Works, Wellington, Somerset: Survey and Analysis of Buildings, Power Systems and Machinery (English Heritage Research Report Series 72-2007), 2 volumes [1]
- Mike Williams, Tonedale Mills, Site Assessment (English Heritage, Architectural Investigation Reports and Papers B/022/2003) [2]
References
- ^ Williams, Mike; Jessop, Lucy (2007). Tone Works, Wellington, Somerset: Survey and Analysis of Buildings, Power Systems and Machinery, volume 2. Swindon: English Heritage Research Report Series 72-2007. pp. 1–2.
- ^ "History". Fox Brothers & Co Ltd. Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ Williams, Mike; Jessop, Lucy (2007). Tone Works, Wellington, Somerset: Survey and Analysis of Buildings, Power Systems and Machinery, volume 1. Swindon: English Heritage Research Report Series 72-2007. p. 6.
- ^ "Wellington Basins Heritage Trail" (PDF). Taunton Deane Borough Council. December 2006. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "The Industrial Revolution and the changing face of Britain". British Museum. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ "Somerset Historic Environment Record: Tonedale Mills, Tonedale, Wellington". Somerset County Council. 1986. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
- ^ Historic England. "Tonedale Mills (East complex) (1176514)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ Clark, Nick (8 October 2014). "Khaki factory and WW1 crane on list of 10 most at-risk buildings". The Independent. London: Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ West, Karl (27 May 2012). "Dragon breathes fire into fabric". The Sunday Times. London: News UK. Archived from the original on 28 May 2015. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ Williams, Mike; Jessop, Lucy (2007). Tone Works, Wellington, Somerset: Survey and Analysis of Buildings, Power Systems and Machinery, 2 volumes. Swindon: English Heritage Research Report Series 72-2007.
- ^ Historic England. "Cloth finishing works at Tone Mills north range including dyehouse and reservoirs (1271246)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ Williams, Mike (2013). Textile Mills of South West England. Swindon: English Heritage. pp. 113–7.
- ^ Historic England. "Tonedale Mills (West complex) (1051987)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "Credit crunch hits homes development at historic mill site". Bristol Post. 29 July 2008. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "Tone Mill". Integral Engineering Design. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "Wellington mills 'at risk' say English Heritage". Somerset County Gazette. 14 July 2010. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "Heritage at Risk Priority Sites 2014" (PDF). English Heritage. 2014. p. 109. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ "Tone Mill planning permission" (PDF). Taunton Deane Borough Council. Retrieved 20 July 2015.