Speaking of Mill chimneys' ( which we weren't)
I used to visit Lister's Mills in Manningham Bradford. Long after it's heyday but when it was still a working mill.
The mill chimney there was nicknamed ''Lister's Pride'' after Samuel Lister who built the place. I think among the mill owners having a 'big chimney' was important. It stood 285 feet tall and took 10,500 tons of stone to complete. Mind you it needed to be big. At it's peak Manningham Mills had 27 acres of weaving sheds working flat out and the steam boilers that used to power the mill took 1000 tons of coal a week to keep going.
I used to visit Lister's Mills in Manningham Bradford. Long after it's heyday but when it was still a working mill.
The mill chimney there was nicknamed ''Lister's Pride'' after Samuel Lister who built the place. I think among the mill owners having a 'big chimney' was important. It stood 285 feet tall and took 10,500 tons of stone to complete. Mind you it needed to be big. At it's peak Manningham Mills had 27 acres of weaving sheds working flat out and the steam boilers that used to power the mill took 1000 tons of coal a week to keep going.