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Home»Unexplained-phenomena»Alchemist British Monks: Digging Up The Old Gunpowder Mills
Unexplained-phenomena

Alchemist British Monks: Digging Up The Old Gunpowder Mills

SteinarBy SteinarNovember 2, 2022No Comments3 Mins Read
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16th-Century monks in Britain had a blast! They were the first to experiment with the recipe of saltpeter, Sulphur and charcoal to produce gunpowder in Britain. In the Battle of Crecy in 1346 the British artillery used gunpowder against the French for the first time. By the 16th century water mills were producing cotton, paper, flour, oil and other products, but they were converted into gunpowder mills, due to shortages experienced during warfare. Many of the mills were privately owned and did not function on an industrial level at first, but converting to gunpowder was much more profitable for the owners, and fun for the monks.

The monks at Waltham Abbey had set up a mill initially producing cloth, then oil, and then gunpowder to supply the Dutch War. In 1787, upon recommendation of the then Deputy Comptroller of the Royal Laboratory at Woolwich, Major, later Luitenant-General, Sir William Congreve, the Crown purchased the Waltham Abbey mills. The Royal Gunpowder Mills in Waltham Abbey, became one of three Royal Gunpowder Mills in the United Kingdom, the others being at Ballincollig and Faversham. Waltham Abbey is the only site to have survived virtually intact. Competing with Waltham Abbey, Faversham, in Kent, England, claims to be the cradle of the Britain’s explosives industry, with the first gunpowder plant established there in the 16th century, possibly at the instigation of the Abbey at Faversham. In 1759 The British government decided it needed its own plant. Rather than build a new one, it nationalized the Home Works, upgraded all the machinery, from hence is was known as the Chart Gunpowder Mill, claiming to be the oldest of its kind in the world.

Restored Chart Gunpowder Mill at Faversham ( CC BY-SA 2.0 )

The Site Of Old Malden Land

Old Malden Land in Worcester Park, just south of the village of Old Malden, has long been of interest to archaeologists and historians alike with many trying to piece together details of the land’s industrial past. This interest has often focused on the area’s historic connections with the activities of John Smeaton, dubbed the ‘father of civil engineering ’ who pioneered amongst other things the use of hydraulic lime in concrete and designed the Eddystone lighthouse. His obituary said of him that “as a civil engineer, Mr Smeaton was not equaled by any of the age he lived in, it may perhaps be added by none of any previous age.” 

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Rebecca Batley has a Bachelor’s degree in archaeology (University of Wales) and a Master’s degree in Classics. In the field she has worked on sites dating to the Bronze Age, Iron Age, Romano-British, Roman, Medieval, Tudor, Georgian and modern periods. Employed by the Louvre Museum, she researched and excavated at sites in Egypt, Syria, and Israel. She works at the Military Intelligence Archive to help to prepare World War One records for cataloguing and digitalisation and she is a part time History tutor.

Top Image : Royal Gunpowder Mills, Waltham Abbey ( CC BY-SA 2.0 )

By: Rebecca Batley





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