Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 115342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 165,122 pages of information and 246,492 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

New Mill, Stroud

From Graces Guide

of Stroud

1766 Thomas Baylis, a prosperous millowner, built a new house and mill on the same site. This was constructed in the shape of a letter E with a central two-storey octagonal hall dividing the mill building at one end, from his house at the other. As first built, the building looked like a large and elegant country house.

1812 following the bankruptcy of Daniel Baylis, the house and mill were sold to Robert Helme and William Helme, who extended the house side in 1833.

1833 Partnership dissolved. '...the Partnership heretofore subsisting between us the undersigned, William Helme and Mashiter Helme, of New Mills, in the Parish of Stroud, in the County of Gloucester, as Clothiers, was this day dissolved by mutual consent...'[1]

1862 The property passed to John Libby, a cloth merchant, but the ownership of the complex was later divided. The house side was still intact and elegantly fitted up in 1912, but had been largely demolished in 1936.

1905 Libby, Edmonds and Co


Half of the northern mill building survives as a two-storey L-shaped range with a battlemented parapet, as does the three-sided central feature. The building is, however, mutilated by later additions.

The land associated with the property has been developed for other uses. The Gloucester Model Laundry Ltd. was built on part of the site in 1910, and in 1929, Stroud Tennis Club acquired most of the rest. They laid out six courts and a half-size practice court was cut into the hill. In the 1930s, their annual August tournament attracted many star players.

In 1921, Samuel Spicer bought the land below Libby's Drive and had the old fish pond there filled in. As a result, hundreds of yellow frogs swarmed onto Slad Road.

During the war, the tennis courts were requisitioned by the Fire Brigade and later the Admiralty. In 1952, B.J. Bown bought the site and two years later a wholesale warehouse and garage was built. The warehouse closed in the 1980s and the whole site is now occupied by a variety of small businesses.


See Also

Loading...

Sources of Information

  • [1] Digital Stroud