
Milling for votes
The experience of a national suffrage campaigner which led to the saving of the nation’s watermills. Miss Emilie Montgomery Gardner, known to most as E.

The experience of a national suffrage campaigner which led to the saving of the nation’s watermills. Miss Emilie Montgomery Gardner, known to most as E.

In a week which has seen the celebration of 100 years since women were first given the right to vote, I have been reflecting upon

Since International Women’s Day is now upon us, it seems apt to pay homage to some of the heroines of the mill world. And –

Author: A C Yoward (revised by Nathanael Hodge) E M Gardner was the driving force behind the inclusion of watermills in the remit of the

Women in milling: A social history She is a Jolly Miller – and she lives by herself (Daily Mail article relating to a Mrs H. Dickinson,

Mildred M. Cookson’s collection is one of the four Foundation Collections of the Mills Archive, and is one of the most nationally significant sets of mill-related

The following biography was written by Eve Logan’s husband, Bari M Logan, in 2002: Evelyn Logan (née Elkin) was born in Lenton, a suburb of