Reply To: Tovil Paper Mills (Maidstone)

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#1211
Artless Bodger
Participant

There were three mills in Tovil; Upper Tovil (Reeds), Lower Tovil (Allnutts, later part of Thomas and Green) and Bridge Mill (earlier Diamond Fibre) (Reeds).

As a family we would often go for Sunday walks including Tovil Hill, and so pass the front of Upper Tovil Mill, in summer the loading dock and 1-2 machine house doors would be open giving tantalising glimpses of the dry ends of the machines. Round the corner in Straw Mill Hill was the entry to the boiler house, several Lancashire boilers, coal fired. From what I’ve been able to ascertain, coal was brought by cart from the nearby goods yard at the end of the Tovil goods branch, which left the south end of Maidstone West goods yard and crossed the river on a lattice girder bridge, passed Bridge Mill and crossed the road at Tovil Green right by the entrance to Lower Tovil mill. In later years we would see a tractor shovel in the boiler house by the coal pile. Up the hill a bit further was a rear entrance to the mill (beater floor area?), and on the opposite side of the road a large green corrugated iron shed which housed the waste paper prep plant, often a Muir Hill dumper parked under the chute for contraries. Adjacent was the entry to the old quarries, used then as a waste paper store yard. Just a bit further on the left was the road to Bockingford and the Barcham Green Hayle Mill.

My maternal grandfather worked in Allnutts for most of his life, one family story related how his teenage decision to get work in the mill precipitated the eviction of his family from their tied farm cottage near Staplehurst, as all the family were expected to work on the farm. When we were children my mother would take us for walks in the afternoons, one typical being to walk down through the Palace Gardens, over Maidstone bridge, along the river bank through Smythe and Drayson’s wood yard, past the market and eventually to Lower Fant where the footbridge crossed to Tovil, we’d then walk into the mill to visit grandad who then ran the slitter. I remember collecting the trim from the slitter and winding it into small reels which I used as paper reels in the wagons on my train set. At the end of the mill yard was the rotary rag boiler. Grandad used to say that during the war, if there was an air raid the safest place to shelter would be under the rag boiler. It was only recently that I discovered that the Allnutt mill had been bought by Thomas and Green, though it retained its name, this explained what Mum had said about Grandad having to go to Bourne End on occasion, though I know not what for. I believe that Henry Allnutt originally came from the High Wycombe area.

Lower Tovil was, at any rate, at one time a rag mill, receiving damaged textiles during the war, including partly burned sheets form bombed hospitals.

Bridge Mill had a wharf on the river and took pulp shipments by lighter. We saw an empty lighter passing through Allington lock on one occasion, the extended lock (there were two sets of downstream gates) was just big enough to accomodate the lighter and the tug ‘Nudget’. The tug driver (if that is the right term, that’s what we knew him as) lived on Greenside at the end of Elm Grove.

Upper Tovil mill (which we always knew as just Tovil mill, the others being Allnutt’s and Bridge) contained 5 paper machines, I had the opportunity to have a look round on 2 occasions, firstly when on a management training course at APM; the older machines 1-3 were still driven by steam engine and line shafting at that time and made case materials, 4 and 5 were in a separate machine house and were either already converted to electric drive or due to be to improve the consistency of the speed control. The wet strength plant was also improved, as the machines were making paper for Kleenex Hi Dri towelling. The later visit was after the mill closed when we were looking to see if any plant might be salvageable for use at Aylesford, I got to look round the chemistry lab and up the steps to the ‘plateau’ where the effluent clarifier was.

The mill was fed with water from the Loose stream, via the mill pond (now the centre piece of a housing development), apparently the mill drains originally discharge into the stream under the mill and thence to the Medway (and the other down stream mills!), the old stream was later turned into a sump and the excess stream flow culverted past the mill. Effluent from the sump was pumped up to the plateau, clarified and both recovered fibre and clarified water returned by gravity to the mill, crossing Straw Mill Hill on a gantry, or to the prep plant on the same side below the plateau.

Plenty of aerial photos of the Tovil Mills on Britain From The Air.

Dennis Spain wrote a treatise on the mills of the Loose stream (where there were several paper mills), this is available at:

https://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk/sites/default/files/archcant/1973%2087%20The%20Loose%20Watermills%20Spain.pdf