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Pin Mill

Hamlet in Suffolk, England

Pin Mill

Summary

Hamlet in Suffolk, England

FieldValue
official_namePin Mill
countryEngland
regionEast of England
os_grid_referenceTM2052537997
coordinates
post_townIpswich
postcode_areaIP
postcode_districtIP9
dial_code01473
civil_parishChelmondiston
shire_districtBabergh
shire_countySuffolk
static_imagePin Mill shoreline - geograph.org.uk - 721031.jpg
static_image_captionThe shoreline at Pin Mill, Chelmondiston
Chelmondiston and Pin Mill Village Sign

Pin Mill is a hamlet on the south bank of the tidal River Orwell, in the civil parish of Chelmondiston, on the Shotley Peninsula, in the Babergh district, in southern Suffolk, England. It lies within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and is a designated Conservation Area. It is now generally known for the historic Butt and Oyster public house, and for sailing.

History

The expression "pin mill" means a pin factory, and also a word for a wheel with projecting pins used in leather production. Neither of these activities are known to have taken place at Pin Mill.

Pin Mill was once a busy landing point for ship-borne cargo, a centre for the repair of Thames sailing barges and home to many small industries such as sail making, a maltings (now a workshop) and a brickyard. The east coast has a long history of smuggling, in which Pin Mill and the Butt and Oyster pub allegedly played key parts.{{cite web|title=The East Coast

During World War II Pin Mill was home to Royal Navy Motor Launches and to a degaussing vessel created from a herring drifter. Pin Mill and Woolverstone were home ports to many tank landing craft used in the invasion of Normandy in 1944.

There were later improvements in the sailing infrastructure, and responsibility for the Hard at Pin Mill was handed over to a new 'community interest' company.{{cite web|title=Celebration Ceremony As Pin Mill is Restored |url=http://www.babergh.gov.uk/Babergh/Home/News/2010/September/CELEBRATION+CEREMONY+AS+PIN+MILL+IS+RESTORED.htm

Leisure activities and places of interest

Pin Mill Hard and the Grindle stream

Pin Mill has often been the subject of painting and photography, and is a popular yacht and dinghy sailing destination. During WWII many yachts were placed for storage west of the hamlet in what were then called 'the saltings,' awaiting the cessation of hostilities. The moorings in the river were home to the Royal Harwich One Design Class boats for many years in the 1940s. There are two boatyards, and the Pin Mill Sailing Club has hosted an annual Barge Match since 1962.{{cite web|title=Pin Mill Barge Match History

The Butt and Oyster is a traditional 17th-century public house that serves real ale.{{cite web|title=Pin Mill Butt & Oyster

Pin Mill lies along the Stour and Orwell walk. There many signposted walks in the immediate area, including through the Cliff Plantation forest owned by the National Trust.

References

References

  1. "Chelmondiston and Pin Mill Walk". East Anglian Daily Times.
  2. The Autobiography of Arthur Ransome p142 (1976, Jonathan Cape, London) {{ISBN. 0-224-01245-2
  3. "Ha'penny Breeze". IMDB.
  4. Renee Waite. "Potted History of Pin Mill". The Pin Mill Society.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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