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Report - - Rural Water Wheel Pumps 4, Windrush Double Beamers (Cotswolds, 2022 - 2023) | Industrial Sites | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Rural Water Wheel Pumps 4, Windrush Double Beamers (Cotswolds, 2022 - 2023)

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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
A tale of local pumps for local people.

I first came across an unusual design of waterwheel pump in the Cotswolds last year - there wasn’t much left, but it evidently had a mechanism involving oscillating overhead beams.
Later the same day I found two more examples, one quite complete.
A couple more trips this year netted a whole bunch more, all clustered around the eastern end of the hills (red dots).



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The only information I can find is a single paper published by the Gloucestershire Society for Industrial Archeology
https://gsia.org.uk/sites/reprints/1997/gi199752.pdf, where these are called Windrush Double Beam Pumps.

Windrush because they are mostly in the catchment area of the River Windrush - yes, the immigration boat was named after this river.

They were all made between the late 1800s and the early 1900s by one firm, Charles East and Son, based in Burford.
East and Son are described in trade directories as ironmongers, engineers and water contractors, and obviously did good business supplying pumps to local estates.
This is a typical design, taken from the paper.



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And a picture of the Burford works, ca 1890.


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Waterwheel pumps normally have horizontal pump cylinders coupled directly to the wheel crank.
However East had a patent on a type of valve with a floating ball which only worked when mounted vertically, hence the up and over arrangement.
With a fairly lightweight, flexible transmission and a short pump stroke these devices evidently didn’t need elaborate parallel linkages, or movable pivots (as in the Grasshopper design for beam engines).


There are a lot of (phone) pictures below since there turned out to be 15 of these things, in varying states of completeness, and they might as well all go in one post.
Pictures were taken mostly to show what’s left and how it works rather than some exercise in derp photography - as far I know these are the only photos available for any of them.




Icomb. Starting with first one I found, near Icomb, which appears on maps between 1882 and 1900 (with a similar date range for most of the rest).
Before and after a bit of excavation.



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The remains of the beams are now dangling, but would have been horizontal and attached to part of the pump house.


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Next to the pump is a cistern for the water being pumped, probably filled from a spring.
The water from streams and rivers in agricultural areas is normally undrinkable, particularly in the Cotswolds where runoff from intensive farming has polluted everything.
This is probably the reason I’ve only seen a couple of frogs on my trips to this part of the world where there would normally be loads in the damp places where these pumps live.



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Remains of the inlet pipe, top left, with water diverted from a stream nearby.


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Kineton. There’s a bit of stuff being stored in here but but the essential features are there - wheel (missing its paddles), vertical pumps linked by overhead beams, fresh water tank.


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Eastington. I couldn’t get close since the door was nailed shut, but from pictures over the door most of it seems to be there.
The water came down a long leat and entered from the back about half way up the wheel - this entrance has been bricked up.
The two pumps can just be glimpsed at floor level although I couldn’t get a clear picture of either.



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Heythrop. Two pumps near each other, the first of which was one-sided with a single pump and overhead beam, and looked as if it was designed that way.
There’s a small empty shed with some wiring on top of the pump house which may have contained a later electrical pump, taking water from the original cistern below.



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continued
 
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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
The second one near Heythrop also had an overshot wheel, this time with the full complement of pumps and beams although bits of the pumps and valve sections were missing.


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Naunton. Another one-sided affair, with an undershot/paddle wheel this time, and some unexpected pump porn up in the rafters.


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Kiddington. This is an older pump house, with the wheel provided by William Hemmings, whose firm was taken over by East.
The original beam arrangement seems to have been replaced with horizontal pumps - it also features pipe-type ballast tanks as in the Naunton example.



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Possible remains of a beam.


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Horizontal pumps, one of which has a split cylinder.


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Burford. No pumps left, but the beams are still there.
An oily plinth together with a hole in the wall suggests that water was later pumped with a diesel engine or similar.
The inlet valve was made by Guest & Chrimes, a name quite often found on water-related machinery.



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Barrington Park. Although apparently equipped by East and Son this was a disappointment - the pump house was completely rebuilt in 2020 and the only thing left is a wheel.
This isn’t even an undershot wheel, which this pump house must have had, so it probably came from somewhere else.



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Since I was there I went down the road to Little Barrington as it was supposed to have an East hand pump on the village green, which it does.
Most villages had these pumps, and many are still there, often made by Evans of Wolverhampton.



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continued
 
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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Heythrop Park. This estate had four pump houses of the double beam sort around the periphery, although two of them turned out to be empty.
All are shown on 1880 maps so are fairly early and may have had different types of pumping equipment installed over the years.
The estate itself was once owned by Thomas Brassey, the early railway pioneer - these days it’s a child-unfriendly sports hotel.


The first one is of unusual design, with both beams on one side of the wheel, driven by an extended crank.
This may be because water, diverted from a waterfall and piped down the bank of a stream, emerged in one corner of the pump house, not leaving much space for a pump between the wheel and the wall.
Another unusual feature is that the beams were hinged the other way round, on the opposite side to the water inlet, although the lintel where they were attached has now collapsed.



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The other half of the pump house is an empty room with mud, water and a few pipes, possibly a fresh water reservoir.


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The second one also had beams hinged on the opposite side of the water intake.
Someone installed a very heavy concrete lintel for the beam guides but without any proper support and it’s now fallen down, wrecking things a bit.
There’s an old Lister just inside the entrance which may have taken over pumping duties.



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In the first empty one you can see where the beams were attached, but not much else.


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The second empty one is similar although there’s part of what may have been a beam with a hinge attached propped up in the corner.


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Bourton-on-the-Water. Together with the final example this one is essentially complete.
The pumps are slightly larger than normal and an extra joint has been incorporated into the pump rod to stop it jamming.
The last picture shows a broken-off ballast tank with a segment of something made by Adams Hydraulics of York, who like Guest and Chrimes made all sorts of water-related equipment.



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Fresh water reservoir.


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continued
 

urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Taynton. The final one is on a tributary of the Windrush, actually the second example I found.
It was apparently refurbished by Green & Carter (who make hydraulic rams) and was in working order until the mid 1990s.
The wheel now looks corroded and has been stopped from rotating by a piece of scaffolding pole.
It’s situated in a bend in the stream, taking water from above a small waterfall, the grill on the left of the first photo.



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So as I said at the beginning, this really does seem to be a case of local pumps for local people.
There may be a few more to find in the Cotswolds, but I haven’t come across anything similar to the Windrush ones before, at least in the northern counties.
 

dansgas1000

28DL Regular User
Regular User
More cracking finds as usual, I love the effort you put in from finding them to taking note of the makes and models of the pumps etc. Nicely done!
 

urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Another Windrush-type pump I found recently, added here for completeness.
Situated in the beechwoods south of Cranham, it’s somewhat to the west of the area where most of the other pumps were found.
This is a single beam example, with the beam hinged opposite the water inlet.




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Beam and hinge.



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Pump and crank after a bit of excavation.



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The remains of a reservoir just uphill which seems to have been the source of the water.



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