Kings Mill Reservoir

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LocationSherwood Way South, Sutton-in-Ashfield, NG17 4PA
Coordinates53°7′53″N 1°13′50″W / 53.13139°N 1.23056°W / 53.13139; -1.23056
TypeReservoir
River sourcesRiver Maun
Kings Mill Reservoir
The reservoir
Location of the reservoir in Nottinghamshire, England.
Location of the reservoir in Nottinghamshire, England.
Kings Mill Reservoir
Location of the reservoir in Nottinghamshire, England.
Location of the reservoir in Nottinghamshire, England.
Kings Mill Reservoir
LocationSherwood Way South, Sutton-in-Ashfield, NG17 4PA
Coordinates53°7′53″N 1°13′50″W / 53.13139°N 1.23056°W / 53.13139; -1.23056
TypeReservoir
River sourcesRiver Maun
Basin countriesUnited Kingdom
Managing agencyAshfield District Council
Built1839
WebsiteMill Waters

Kings Mill Reservoir is situated in Sutton-in-Ashfield, in the Ashfield District of Nottinghamshire, close to the boundary of Mansfield, and adjacent to Kings Mill Hospital.[1][2] It forms part of the Maun from Source to Vicar Water water body.[3]

Kings Mill Reservoir, also known as Mill Waters, used to be part of the Welbeck Estate owned by the William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland, former Member of Parliament for Petersfield. The reservoir was created in 1839[4] after the Duke in 1837 commissioned the flooding of 72 acres of farmland and the ancient mill pond,[5] with the aim of supplying water to the mills along the River Maun.[6] An early record of the mill at Kings Mill can be seen in Domesday Book dating to 1086.[6]

In the time of Henry II of England, the King visited what is now known as Kings Mill,[4] staying at the home of Sir John Cockle[5] for a night having been hunting in Sherwood Forest. Sir John Cockle was later known as the Miller of Mansfield.[7][5]

The reservoir at dusk

The Mill Adventure Base

The Adventure Centre from the reservoir

The Mill Adventure Base at Kings Mill Reservoir is a purpose-built adventure centre designed to provide activities to young people of Nottinghamshire. Young people are able to stay in the camping pods or the tented village on site.

Some of the activities include archery, canoeing, high ropes, mountain biking, an outdoor climbing tower, raft building, zip wire and shelter building. The centre is run by Nottinghamshire County Council and also includes other sites Bestwood Environmental Education Centre and Hagg Farm Outdoor Education Centre in the Peak District.[8] An open water swimming group have also operated from the base.[9]

Amenities

There is the Mill Waters cafe close to the Mill Adventure Centre.[10]

The Hermitage local nature reserve

The Mansfield and Pinxton Railway viaduct over the River Maun] outfall from the mill-pond originally powering the old Kings Mill, looking towards Mansfield

Situated directly downstream on the reservoir's outfall beneath the site of the old Kings Mill and overlooked by Kings Mill Viaduct, a listed structure and part of the historic Mansfield and Pinxton Railway, the reserve lies alongside a small section of the next mill pond along the route, originally powering Hermitage Mill.[11]

The small wildlife haven was established on land bequeathed by former solicitor Col. J.N. Vallance,[12][13] who lived at nearby Hermitage House, for the use and good of the local people. 46 species of birds have been recorded, including at an established Heronry.[14] Several more local reserves provide a green wildlife corridor along the River Maun.[11]

Owned by Mansfield District Council since 1986 and given Local Nature Reserve status in 2004, it has been closed-off to public since early December 2024, due to hazardous conditions including poor walkways and diseased trees. As of February 2026, the council had submitted a planning application to fell some trees protected by a Tree Preservation Order (TPO) and commissioned a specialist's report.[15][16]

Former sailing club

References

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