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The Bine water mill, a windmill, farmland and the property in West Street,
Storrington, that Henry and Jane JOYES took over in 1855 had previously been
owned by Jane's grandfather George HARD and managed by her father William
Henry MARSHALL. When Henry and Jane moved from Ewhurst to Storrington they
already had three young children, Jane, Henry Marshall and John, a baby of
six months. A further seven children were born at the West Street house:
Rosa [died in infancy] Ellen, Albert William, Edgar Walter, Matilda, Hugh,
Emma.
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An artist's impression of the former Bine mill.
From an oil painting owned by Joan Ham
and shown here with her kind permisision
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Besides being a miller and farmer Henry JOYES was a wood and coal merchant.
He had a large barn in West Street by the house which was a storage depot
for wood, coal and corn. A small donkey carried laden sacks between the mill
on Bine common and the barn and a narrow walled lane leading to West Street
became known as Donkey Lane or Joyes Twitten.
In 1871, the windmill, which had been left running overnight, caught fire
and was completely destroyed. It was an event long remembered by the local
inhabitants. In 1875 the eldest daughter Jane married Thomas Cameron,a
draper of Peckham.
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Bine Mill
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The eldest son Henry Marshall JOYES was apprenticed to an iron monger. Later
he bought an iron mongery and grocery shop in Storrington Square. It was
here that he and his wife Alice BIRD [from Hemel Hempstead] lived with their
young children, Elsie, Arthur and Rupert. Alice died after the birth of
another son who did not survive either. Henry Marshall remarried, to Jane
DOWNER the daughter of a Kirdford farmer. A daughter Una was born and a year
later he sold the business to James GREENFIELD and moved to larger premises
at Pulborough.
When the father Henry JOYES moved his milling business to Fittleworth his
second son John took over the Storrington properties. He and his wife Ellen
[West] had two children, a son Frank Edward and a daughter Kathleen Mary
known as Kitty. John JOYES took an active role in the affairs of
Storrington and served as a councillor.
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Henry Marshall JOYES and family
{L-R Elsie, Rupert, 2nd wife Jane, Una, HMJ and Arthur}
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John JOYES recalls
In 1929 John JOYES, then an old man, contributed notes on the village and its inhabitants for a booklet on Storrington by Maude D Petre. He was able to recall the time when the daily post was brought from a depot at Hurstpierpoint to Storrington, hauled on a sledge by dogs. It saddened him that items crafted by the local shoemaker, cooper, glove-maker etc were being replaced by factory made ware.
He described a time when fairs were held in the village in May and November. "The square used to be full of tents selling toys, sweets and other things, shooting galleries etc." "When our late King Edward was married, I think it was March 1863 [I was nine years old] a celebration took place in almost all the villages. I can so well remember it , feeling so proud of being a torch-bearer and marching in procession to the top of the Downs, where a big fire was lighted and the people amused themselves by singing and dancing around it, and you could see fires burning for miles around". He also recalled that there had been sixty working windmills within a radius of ten miles; but not one still in use by 1929.
Like his father Frank JOYES became a miller. He married Alice SHORT a
farmer's daughter from Findon. They had two sons, John Albert, 'Jack', and
Richard, 'Dick'. [Dick JOYES emigrated to Australia]
Frank served as the treasurer of the Storrington Cricket Club. His wife
Alice ran a little seed shop in High Street. Years later the widowed Alice
and her sister in law Kitty shared two semi-detached houses built in West Street on the site
of the old barn.
The graves of John, Ellen, Frank and Kathleen are in the Storrington
churchyard. There is also a headstone for Henry Marshall and his first wife
Alice and two of Henry Marshall's infant sons from his two marriages.
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John Joyes' cart outside his barn at the end of the street,
next to the Joyes house
and bakery.
Joyes Twitten
or Donkey Lane
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THEN......
Close-up of the Bakery clearly showing the name over the door.
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and NOW... well 1994
Still selling bread
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Another business enterprise generated from milling was the making of malt.
The JOYES family used the malt house in Back Lane in Storrington and one
between Brewers Yard and the mill pond according to Florence M. Greenfield
in her book "Round about Old Storrington"
Florence Greenfield was one of the few Storringtonians at the end of the
1900s, who could remember some of the JOYES family members.
As a child she liked to watch through the low malthouse windows as the
maltster carefully turned the barley grain spread across the damp malthouse
floor, using a broad wooden shovel, to ensure even germination. At the
right stage of growth the grain was moved to the end of the building where
it was gradually heated in the kiln before being screened and stored for
later use in brewing beer.
The old village brew house in Brewers Yard was no longer in use for its
original purpose, but rather as a coach house, when Brewers Yard was
purchased by Henry Marshall JOYES in 1880. The brewhouse and surrounding
cottages have all been refurbished and are now desirable residences in the
heart of the village.
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Brewers Yard, Storrington
Courtesy of Joan Ham
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Postcard of Chantry Mill Pond c1909
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Cricket on Ice
Storringtonians loved the game of cricket and during winters, when the
village ponds froze, fun games of cricket were sometimes held. On 7th
January 1891 such a game was played on the Chantry mill pond and reported in The Sporting Life. There were
two teams of fifteen a side, led by the miller Henry Crowshurst and Ernest
Hammond, proprietor of the White Horse Hotel. On this occasion all players
were required to wear top hats which added to the fun. [John JOYES made 7
runs for the Hammond team]
At the conclusion of the game the Storrington band headed the cricket
players as they marched to the White Horse for an evening of conviviality.
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For a match report and those all important statistics please click on report below
Perhaps some of your ancestors were playing that day.
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Bine Mill Pond
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Web site and all contents © Copyright J R Joyes 2007, All rights reserved.
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