Amazines Free Article Archive
www.amazines.com - Sunday, September 21, 2025
Read about the most recent changes and happenings at Amazines.com
Log into your account or register as a new author. Start submitting your articles right now!
Search our database for articles.
Subscribe to receive articles emailed straight to your email account. You may choose multiple categories.
View our newest articles submitted by our authors.
View our most top rated articles rated by our visitors.
* Please note that this is NOT the ARTICLE manager
Add a new EZINE, or manage your EZINE submission.
Add fresh, free web content to your site such as newest articles, web tools, and quotes with a single piece of code!
Home What's New? Submit/Manage Articles Latest Posts Top Rated Article Search
Google
Subscriptions Manage Ezines
CATEGORIES
 Article Archive
 Advertising (133577)
 Advice (161673)
 Affiliate Programs (34799)
 Art and Culture (73859)
 Automotive (145732)
 Blogs (75626)
 Boating (9851)
 Books (17224)
 Buddhism (4130)
 Business (1331108)
 Business News (426461)
 Business Opportunities (366526)
 Camping (10974)
 Career (72796)
 Christianity (15854)
 Collecting (11638)
 Communication (115089)
 Computers (241958)
 Construction (38977)
 Consumer (49954)
 Cooking (17080)
 Copywriting (6734)
 Crafts (18203)
 Cuisine (7549)
 Current Affairs (20323)
 Dating (45910)
 EBooks (19704)
 E-Commerce (48279)
 Education (185539)
 Electronics (83526)
 Email (6438)
 Entertainment (159864)
 Environment (29004)
 Ezine (3040)
 Ezine Publishing (5454)
 Ezine Sites (1551)
 Family & Parenting (111012)
 Fashion & Cosmetics (196613)
 Female Entrepreneurs (11854)
 Feng Shui (134)
 Finance & Investment (310640)
 Fitness (106493)
 Food & Beverages (63058)
 Free Web Resources (7941)
 Gambling (30227)
 Gardening (25207)
 Government (10519)
 Health (630196)
 Hinduism (2206)
 Hobbies (44083)
 Home Business (91754)
 Home Improvement (251317)
 Home Repair (46265)
 Humor (4729)
 Import - Export (5462)
 Insurance (45105)
 Interior Design (29641)
 International Property (3488)
 Internet (191035)
 Internet Marketing (146690)
 Investment (22864)
 Islam (1161)
 Judaism (1352)
 Law (80500)
 Link Popularity (4596)
 Manufacturing (20937)
 Marketing (99329)
 MLM (14140)
 Motivation (18237)
 Music (27000)
 New to the Internet (9498)
 Non-Profit Organizations (4050)
 Online Shopping (129744)
 Organizing (7813)
 Party Ideas (11855)
 Pets (38165)
 Poetry (2229)
 Press Release (12691)
 Public Speaking (5643)
 Publishing (7566)
 Quotes (2407)
 Real Estate (126929)
 Recreation & Leisure (95497)
 Relationships (87678)
 Research (16182)
 Sales (80372)
 Science & Technology (110302)
 Search Engines (23525)
 Self Improvement (153319)
 Seniors (6224)
 Sexuality (36012)
 Small Business (49405)
 Software (83054)
 Spiritual (23539)
 Sports (116156)
 Tax (7664)
 Telecommuting (34070)
 Travel & Tourism (308305)
 UK Property Investment (3123)
 Video Games (13382)
 Web Traffic (11803)
 Website Design (56951)
 Website Promotion (36673)
 World News (1000+)
 Writing (35853)
Author Spotlight
AREESH ISHTIAQ

Areesh Ishtiaq a Top Rated SEO and Digital Marketing Guru on Upwork, working as a project manager fo...more
HASSAN ELHAIS

Dr. Hassan Elhais, along with the team of legal consultants and prominent local lawyers across the U...more
ROBIN CALAMAIO

Free Christian Ebook (s) and more at freelygive-n.com! Robin Calamaio became a Christian in 1977....more
LEMUEL ASIBAL

Lemuel Asibal is a web content writer who also ventures on writing articles and blog posts about any...more
LINDA HOLLAND

I am a passionate article and blog writer based in South Africa. With a love for life and a strong d...more


River cray by zyzy wang





Article Author Biography
River cray by
Article Posted: 08/06/2011
Article Views: 181
Articles Written: 2301
Word Count: 2060
Article Votes: 0
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

River cray


 
Business,Business News,Business Opportunities
Clean-ups on the river and campaigns for responsible angling are organised by the Cray Anglers Conservation Group.



There is a signposted public footpath called the Cray Riverway alongside the river, beginning at Foots Cray Meadows and continuing for 10 miles (about 16 km) northwards to the Thames. It is marketed as part of the London LOOP.



Meaning: the term "cray" is an old British one, meaning "clear, pure".



For an explanation of the various pieces of machinery mentioned, see Mill machinery.



The River Cray powered fourteen watermills. From source to mouth they were -



A Domesday site, Orpington Mill stood almost at the source of the River Cray. The mill building dated to the eighteenth century and was of traditional construction of a timber frame clad with weatherboards under a peg tile roof. The mill was powered by a 11ft6in (3.51m) by 9feet (2.74m) cast iron waterwheel carried on a cast iron axle which had replaced an earlier wooden one. Much of the machinery was of cast iron, including the wallower, great spur wheel and crown wheel. The upright shaft was of wood. The mill drove three pairs of millstones. Miller John Colgate had introduced steam power by the 1870s, and the tall chimney for the steam engine was known locally as "Colgate's Folly", being so named as it didn't function as well as intended. The mill was used as a store in its final years before demolition, which was in 1934 or 35.



Snelling's Mill, St. Mary Cray



A weir near the Black Boy hotel marked the spot of a Domesday mill. The mill was demolished in 1872 and the area landscaped as part of the grounds of a public park. William Joynson bought the mill for 8,000 to enable the creation of the park.



The 13ft4in (4.06m) by 8ft6in (2.59m) cast iron waterwheel survived. It was used to drive a beam pump which supplied water to fountains and conservatories at "The Rookery". The wheel was intact until 1962, when the shed it was in was stripped of ivy and exposed. The wheel was then vandalised and had been cleared away by March 1964.



Upper Paper Mill, St. Mary Cray



This mill stood opposite the Temple PH, it had an undershot waterwheel. Nicholas Townsend was mentioned in insurance records in 1757, and William Sims in 1771. In 1784 William Townsend was first mentioned as a paper maker in St. Mary Cray, In 1786 Samuel Lay of Sittingbourne was the papermaker, he was described as a master papermaker in 1801. Martha Lay ordered two moulds in 1806. Martha Lay was running the mill in 1816, paper from this mill bore the watermark Martha Lay 1804. The mill ceased working in 1834.



Joynson's Mill, St. Mary Cray



This was a corn mill which stood near St. Mary Cray church. It was replaced by a paper mill, then a paper factory and in recent years by a warehouse complex.



In 1787 this mill was being run by Henry Brightly. John Hall was the owner in 1816. Charles Cowan was working at the mill in 1819, when the mill had two vats and was producing an estimated 1,500pounds (680kg) of paper a week. William Joynson took over in 1834. He had previously been at a paper mill in Snodland Paper produced here bore the watermarks "Joynson Superfine" or "WJ&S" over "St Mary Cray Kent". In 1839, Joynson was granted a patent for watermarking paper produced by machine. The waterwheel was of cast iron construction and may have been overshot, as the head was some 8feet (2.44m) to 9feet (2.74m). The mill was expanded in 1853, when a second machine was installed, enabling the steam driven mills to produce 55,000pounds (25,000kg) to 66,000pounds (30,000kg) of paper a week. William Joynson died in 1874 and the mills were left under trusteeship to his two grandsons. One of them, William, drowned in 1875 leaving Edmund Hamborough Joynson as sole heir. Cowan mentions that at one time the mill was producing an estimated 70,000pounds (32,000kg) of paper a week in 1878. Some 700 people were employed at the mill in 1881 and E. H. Joynson took over the mill in September 1882, expanding the mill the following year with a new steam engine and machinery.An engraving of the mill in 1891 can be seen here. Joynson produced only high class writing papers. In the late 1890s, a dryer was sold to Nash's and installed in their mill at St. Pauls Cray. Edmund Joynson took his son into partnership shortly before World War One. The firm became William Joynson & Son. In 1914, Joynson's paper was used in the first 1 and 10/- banknotes issued by the Bank of England. Edmund H Joynson retired in 1930 and the mills were taken over by Messrs Wiggins Teape & Co. who promptly closed the mills in order to undertake a rebuild. 350 people were made redundant, and only 200 would be employed in the reopened factory. The paper factory made greaseproof and vegetable parchment paper. The mill reopened in April 1933 as the Vegetable Parchment Mills (Delcroix) Ltd. The production of "vulcanised fibre" began c.1943. In 1963 the mill was the home of the National Paper Museum The mill closed in 1967 and the paper museum collection was transferred to the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.



St. Paul's Cray Mill



In 1718 this mill had two waterwheels driving machinery for dressing leather in oil, and a third for corn milling. The mill was replaced by a paper mill, powered by a turbine.



Foots Cray (Nash's) Paper Mill



This paper mill replaced the earlier corn mill. Papermaking had been established by 1742. A steam engine had been installed by c1820. It was used in the 1830s as a meeting place for Baptists. In 1845, Mary Ann Nash inherited the profits & rents of the mill until her sons came of age under the terms of her husband's will. Mary Ann Nash died on June 7 1852. Thomas Nash enlarged the mill in 1853. After his death at the age of 21, his brother William was manager under the trustees until he came of age in 1857. William Nash was married twice, and had five children. In 1870 they moved from the Mill House to a new house called Crayfield House. It is recorded that the axle of the waterwheel protruded into the kitchen of the Mill House. William Nash died on September 11 1879 and the mill was in the hands of trustees again. In 1898 a 250hp double-expansion condensing steam engine by Pollitt & Wigzell was installed, along with a second paper machine. Shortly after this a secondhand dryer was purchased from Joynson's mill to replace one that had proved not to be suitable. By 1954 the site was a factory complex. It had been demolished by 1986.



Foot's Cray mill was a paper mill. By the 1870s it was used as a fabric printing works. At the turn of the 20th Century the mill was being used as a factory making photographic film. Its final use was involved with the processing of silk. The paper mill had two cast iron overshot waterwheel in parallel. Each was 15feet (4.57m) diameter. One was 10feet 6inches (3.20m) wide and the other was 5feet (1.52m) wide. The mill was demolished in 1929.



The Old Mill PH



A Domesday site, one of three in Bexley. This was a corn mill. In 1255, the miller, Auxellus, was censured for allowing the escape of a suspected murder. A millstone was bought for 55s.6d. in 1300.The last building on the site dated from 1779, when the low breast shot waterwheel of 14feet (4.27m) by 10feet (3.05m) powered four pairs of millstones. It was owned by the Cannon family from 1839 to 1907. Stephen Cannon was the first of the Cannon family, also running mills on the River Darent. The miller in 1872 was Stephen Cannon (son), who concentrated the business at Bexley, the mills on the Darent being sold. A steam engine was installed in 1884, the tall chimney was built by a Mr Hart from Lancashire, who fell from the top whlilst doing repairs and lived to tell the tale as his fall was broken by theroof of the engine house. The Cannon family sold Bexley mill in 1907. The mill was used in its latter days for making sacks. A picture of the mill can be seen here. The mill was burnt down on 12 May 1966 and was replaced by the Old Mill PH, a pub with a mill theme.



Hall Place Mill, Bexley



A Domesday site, this mill stood behind the mansion of Hall Place. The mill was run by the Cannon family at one time. The mill was a corn mill until 1882, and was then converted to a silk printing and flagmaking factory. It was demolished by a traction engine in 1925, with some of the main beams being sold to an American millionare, Mr Brady. He used them in the construction of a mansion. The low breast shot waterwheel was 14feet (4.27m) by 9feet (2.74m) and powered at least two pairs of millstones.



Swaisland's Printing Works, Crayford



A print works was established by Charles Swaisland in 1812. Two waterwheel symbols were marked on Greenwood's 1821 map. A cast iron and wood low breast shot waterwheel of approximately 10feet (3.05m) by 6feet (1.83m) was removed c1948. It drove wooden drums for fabric washing. A second waterwheel was in existence in 1893.



This mill stood where Watling Street crossed the cray. In the eighteenth century it processed calico. It was marked on Greenwood's 1821 map as Calico Mills.



Lower (Iron) Mill, Crayford



This was the site of a plating mill built in the 16th century. It was in existence by 1570. It was still used as a flatting mill in the early eighteenth century, when it was owned by Lady Shovell. It was known as Crayford Iron Mill in 1800. It had a breastshot waterwheel. In 1817, it was replaced by Crayford Flour Mills.



This was a saw mill powered by a breast shot waterwheel. It partnered Crayford Iron Mill from 1765. The timber for the floor of Buckingham Palace was produced here. The saw mill stood alongside Crayford flour Mill, it was standing in 1854.



Crayford Flour Mills were built in 1817. It was powered by a cast iron low breast shot waterwheel 28feet (8.53m) by 4feet 6inches (1.37m) and drove five pairs of French Burr millstones. The upright shaft was wooden, with a cast iron wallower. The waterwheel and machinery were scrapped in 1914, when roller milling plant was installed, driven by gas engines.



Cray Anglers Conservation Group



a b c d e f g h i j k l Reid, Kenneth (1987). Watermills of the London Countryside, Vol 1. Cheddar, Somerset, UK: Charles Skilton Ltd.. p.143. ISBN 0284 39165 4.



a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Stoyel, Alan (2008). Memories of Kentish Watermills, The Rivers Cray & Darent. Ashbourne: Landmark Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84306-418-3.



Rootsweb St Mary Crayy John Blundell section



a b c d e f g h i j k Rootsweb St. Mary Cray Paper Mills section



a b c d e f Rootsweb The History of St Mary Cray section



a b c d e Mills archive



a b Rootsweb Paper Makers 1817-1967 section



Rootsweb Bombshell at St. Mary Cray, Joynson mill closed. illage out of work. section



Rootsweb Joynson's Mill section



Foots Cray Baptist Church



a b c d Ideal Homes



a b "Crayford". North West Kent Family History Society. Retrieved 27 December 2008.



River Cray River Darent



Medway watermills Medway watermills (lower tributaries) Medway watermills (middle tributaries) Medway watermills (upper tributaries)



Categories: Rivers of London

Geography of Bexley

Watermills in England

I am a professional writer from Mp3 Player Manufacturers, which contains a great deal of information about remote control car camera , toshiba tv remote codes, welcome to visit!

Related Articles - remote control car camera, toshiba tv remote codes,

Email this Article to a Friend!

Receive Articles like this one direct to your email box!
Subscribe for free today!

 Rate This Article  
Completely useless, should be removed from directory.
Minimal useful information.
Decent and informative.
Great article, very informative and helpful.
A 'Must Read'.

 

Do you Agree or Disagree? Have a Comment? POST IT!

 Reader Opinions 
Submit your comments and they will be posted here.
Make this comment or to the Author only:
Name:
Email:
*Your email will NOT be posted. This is for administrative purposes only.
Comments: *Your Comments WILL be posted to the AUTHOR ONLY if you select PRIVATE and to this PUBLIC PAGE if you select PUBLIC, so write accordingly.
 
Please enter the code in the image:



 Author Login 
LOGIN
Register for Author Account

 

Advertiser Login

 

ADVERTISE HERE NOW!
   Limited Time $60 Offer!
   90  Days-1.5 Million Views  

 

Great Paranormal Romance


TIM FAY

After 60-plus years of living, I am just trying to pass down some of the information that I have lea...more
ALEX BELSEY

I am the editor of QUAY Magazine, a B2B publication based in the South West of the UK. I am also the...more
LAURA JEEVES

At LeadGenerators, we specialise in content-led Online Marketing Strategies for our clients in the t...more
STEPHEN BYE

Stephen Bye is a fiction writer. His most recent novels are a 5-book “The Developer” series which be...more
PAUL PHILIPS

For more articles, blog messages & videos and a free e-book download go to www.NewParadigm.ws your p...more
LEVAL AINAH

I am an internet marketer and also an educator. My goal is to help others who are looking to improve...more
STEVERT MCKENZIE

Stevert Mckenzie, Travel Enthusiast. ...more
GENE MYERS

Author of four books and two screenplays; frequent magazine contributor. I have four other books "in...more
ADRIAN JOELE

I have been involved in nutrition and weight management for over 12 years and I like to share my kn...more
MICHAEL BRESCIANI

Rev Bresciani is the author of two Christian books. One book is an important and concisely written b...more

HomeLinksAbout UsContact UsTerms of UsePrivacy PolicyFAQResources
Copyright © 2025, All rights reserved.
Some pages may contain portions of text relating to certain topics obtained from wikipedia.org under the GNU FDL license