Wookey Paper Mill - Wookey - Somerset
History-
Wookey Hole Mill is the earliest known paper mill in Somerset, with the first reference to a paper mill on the site occurring in a lease of 1610.
In 1728 the lease was offered for sale in Farley's Bristol Newspaper and in 1736 the lease was taken over by Edward Band, a paper maker from Dulcote.
The Band family continued ownership of the prosperous mill until 1808, when John Golding purchased the lease and ran the mill with James Snelgrove.
Snelgrove took sole tenancy in 1819 and upon the death of his son John in 1833 the mill lease was sold to Robert Barlett Coles. In 1853 William Sampson Hodgkinson purchased the Mill outright from the trustees of Wells Old Almshouses, with the sale being completed in 1856.
The Mill was purchased for the low sum of £800, due to the buildings being in disrepair as a result of a fire on 20 April 1855.
In 1972 the paper mill was put up for sale and ceased making paper.
Production of paper was transferred to nearby St Cuthbert's Mill.
In 1973 the Madame Tussaud Group brought both the paper mill and Wookey Hole Caves and reintroduced handmade papermaking as a tourist attraction.
It is a three-storey building standing over the River Axe.
Hauntings
Shadowy figures have been seen, thought to be former workers who had perished through industrial accidents at the site.
Ghostly children have been seen and heard both inside and outside the mill.
The mirror maze now situated as part of the fairground exhibition is said to have a poltergeist, thought to be a male who is fascinated by the mirrors.
There is a private cottage near the mill which was built around 1878 and was inhabited by a lady for 60 years.
She died in 1947, going forward new residents of the cottage would see the ghost of a lady in a white apron walking around upstairs, sometimes with her hands clasped.
Footsteps are heard and doors open & close, someone was also touched on the shoulder.
Possibly not linked to the woman, but a smell of mould would come and go in waves until the house was blessed by a local vicar.
Most Haunted investigated here in 2009, Series 11, Ep24
Thoughts -
Its most likely that the mould smell, was just that, mould, as it is an old cottage and most likely damp, and possibly a coincidence the smell stopped after the house was blessed.
Hopefully the ghost of the lady is still there as it would seem she was still attached to her home and wished to remain there.
Source - Paranormal Somerset - Selena Wright
Photos - Britain from Above, Know Your Place Maps 1888
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