Germany

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Germany

221 Archival description results for Germany

213 results directly related Exclude narrower terms

Scrapbook of etchings and photographs

Scrapbook of etchings of mills in England and Europe from encyclopedias and books, including pages from "The Illustrated Exhibitor and Magazine of Art". Two photographs by the Folkestone Herald and Gazette of Horn Street Mill being demolished. Stephen Buckland's scrapbook number 55.

Buckland, John Stephen Percy (1935-2006), mill researcher

Research material on various subjects - 4

Research material, as compiled by Stephen Buckland, containing typescripts, notes, photocopies from publications and correspondence, relating to Philadelphia Steam Mill; Bradwell tower mill; The Practical Mechanics Journal, 1848-63; W H Uhland, Windmotors, 1915; Faujas of Saint Fond, Andernach quarries.

Buckland, John Stephen Percy (1935-2006), mill researcher

Album of postcards of windmills in Europe

Album of 20th century postcards of windmills in Belgium, Germany, France, England, Sweden, and Netherlands. Stephen purchased these postcards at SPAB on 21 November 1998.

Buckland, John Stephen Percy (1935-2006), mill researcher

Album of photographs of Dutch, French and German windmills

Copy prints made by Stephen Buckland in 1989 and 1990 of negatives, slides, postcards and photographs in "The Abbott Collection of Photographs, Slides and Postcardsof Windmills in Britain and Europe" at the Science Museum, London (http://archives.sciencemuseumgroup.ac.uk/Details/archivescience/110000006). Stephen Buckland wrote an article on Geoffrey Abbott's collection in "The Newcomen Bulletin", no. 141, August 1988, p.18, a copy of which is available in the Mills Archive Library.
Additional postcards and photographs of windmills in Lot, France by Chris Boyle.

Buckland, John Stephen Percy (1935-2006), mill researcher

Pages from a loose-leaf notebook - 1926 to 1929

Assorted brief 'aide memoire' and more detailed notes on a variety of milling matters including: notes taken from books/papers and maps (e.g. 'Dynamics of Windmills' - J.A. Griffiths, the 'English Encyclopedia', 1802, Merian's 'View of London', 1638 and 'The Miller, 1900 and 1916); lists of milling journals, articles, reports and academic papers (including electricity generation); more detailed notes and drawings on the mills listed at 'Place access points' below; a June 1926 typed packing and kit list for a trip to Suffolk and expenses incurred; mileage and logbooks for a trip in June 1928 and again for Wailes' Easter trip to Anglesey in 1929; notes taken from a visit to the Sussex Archives Collection including an account of the relocation of an entire Brighton windmill in 1797; a list of Lancashire mills in working order; and an anecdote about an interaction between a miller and the King of Prussia.

Wailes, Reginald (1901-1986), engineer, known as Rex

'Letter from Leipzig'

60 page 'letter' sent to Wailes' wife, Enid. The letter is in the form of a diary recording Wailes' trip to the Leipzig Trade Fair. It records Wailes' impressions of his train trip through Germany, his fellow travellers and a visit to the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra.

The last ten pages record Wailes' trip north of Leipzig 'on the main Berlin road & as soon as we got out of the suburbs, there was a mill to every village we saw. Nearly all were post mills, & nearly all were the same. Patent sails, no round house tailpole with a winch on the end, straight pitched roof, vertical weatherboarding all tarred.' He comments that those mills near the main road had advertisments on their sides.

Wailes records a visit to a mill near Delitzsch where he meets the miller, Kurt Schumann, and 'took many photos, both inside and out'. There was also a visit to an unidentified tower mill, built in 1886, which Schumann described as a 'Hollandsche műhle,' which was brick-built with a fan-tail and octagonal cap. Wailes is particularly struck by the fact that it, 'had a lift instead of a chain for the sack hoist!!'.

A 'poltrok' mill at Rődgen is also visited (converted from a post mill in 1924, the original dating from 1614). Wailes comments, 'the mill is chock full of new machinery and new methods of drive, sufficient of the old being left to make it intensely interesting'.

Wailes concludes the letter, 'Must stop now. Dresden tomorrow'.

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