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Grade I-listed Outwood Mill dates back to a year before the Great Fire of London and is set in the grounds of a three-bedroom house in the Surrey village of Outwood - and it's still capable of milling corn.
The 352-year-old mill stands 39ft high, with sails measuring 60ft across, and can still be operated by one person
Outwood Windmill, a post mill on a single storey roundhouse, was built in 1665 for miller Thomas Budgen, who lived in the nearby village of Nutfield.
He borrowed the money to buy the land and build the mill from his two brothers-in-law and, as being a miller was such a lucrative trade, Budgen was able to pay back his financiers with interest in just two years.
The men who built the mill are said to have watched the Great Fire of London glowing in the distance, some 25 miles away.
In 1678, Budgen was fined £20, worth around £1,700 in today's money, after he was convicted under the Convecticle Act for 'Seditious Preaching'.
Budgen was an ancestor of another John Budgen, who set up the eponymous supermarket chain in 1872.
He died, aged 75, in 1716, and the mill passed to his son John, and then to other family members, before it came into possession of the Jupp family by 1806. They ran it until 1962, when it was bought by brothers Gerald and Raymond Thomas.
In 1796, William Budgen was given permission to put up a second windmill, this one a smock mill, which was run by the Budgen family until 1885 when Edward Scot bought the lease for £1,225.
By the 1930s, the original mill was little used, and although it had been recognised by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1929 as being of 'paramount importance', it had started to fall into ruin with plans to restore it delayed by the outbreak of the Second World War.
Extensive repairs were carried out in 1952, and in 1955 a grant of £750 from the Ministry of Works was provided to fund the fitting of a new pair of spring sales, on the condition that the public would be given access to the mill.
On June 12, 1964, the mill was caught in a severe thunderstorm, and only saved when the new owners turned the mill so that the wind was side on to the building.
The mill has four spring sails controlled by elliptical springs, carried on a wooden windshaft with a cast iron poll end. It drives two pairs of millstones, and is winded by tailpole.