Town Mill, Mansfield

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View from the north-east in 2019

Town Mill is a historic building in Mansfield, England. It was built around 1775 as a water-driven flour mill and later converted to manufacture textiles. From 1969 to 2010, Town Mill operated as a public house and music venue. After falling derelict, several attempts have been made to bring it back into use. In 2024, it was the site of an illegal cannabis farm.

The current mill building was erected around 1775 but milling took place on the site from at least the 1740s.[1][2] It operated initially as a water-driven flour mill before being converted to the manufacture of textiles.[3] In 1816, it was under the ownership of Hankock, Wakefield & Harker. At the site and the nearby New Mill, they employed 48 men, 110 women, 47 boys and 69 girls (some of the latter under the age of 10).[4] In 1907, the building suffered two fires which left significant damage to the top storey and the matchboard roof.[2] From 1969, the building operated as a public house and music venue.[3][5] On 21 March 1994, the mill building and an adjoining boundary wall were granted statutory protection as a grade II listed building.[1] The pub closed in 2010 and the site fell derelict.[5]

In 2016, a public consultation was held on a £1.7 million plan to bring the building back into use by Charnwood Training Group as a training academy for the pub food industry. The upper floors would have hosted a 16-room bed and breakfast run by students as a not-for-profit enterprise.[6] The plan ended when the company collapsed.[3] In 2019, a planning application was submitted to convert the structure into an 18-room hotel, restaurant and micro-brewery.[7] This also did not progress and in September 2021, Mansfield District Council declared its intention to bring the building back into use as part of a redevelopment of the town centre.[8]

In January 2024, the Town Mill was listed in the Mansfield Chad newspaper as the building that local people most wanted to see brought back into use; suggestions were made of returning it to use as a pub or converting it into a small hydro-electric power station.[3] On September 2024, the building was raided by Nottinghamshire Police, who found a 2,000-plant illegal cannabis farm stretching across multiple rooms of the structure. The plants, with a street value in excess of £2 million, were taken away and the growing equipment destroyed. A suspect was arrested nearby.[9]

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