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To your right
you can see kind of water 'steps' coming up from the main river to the
Mill Stream. This is a bypass sluice that's been made into a fish pass
by the Environment Agency. The theory is that larger fish can migrate
up it and re-colonise the Abbey Mill stream but you probably won't see
any leaping salmon.
The Fighting
Cocks pub is officially entered in the Guinness Book of Records as the
oldest inhabited pub in Britain, a fact that is hotly disputed by Ye Olde
Trip To Jerusalem in Nottingham.
Archaeological
digs here have found material dating back to around 1500 but it's also
possible that it was also used as a brew house for the Abbey much earlier
than that.
This would
also make sense because if they were using the river to grind grain in
the mills which were owned by the abbot, then they could also have had
their own brewery - hence a much earlier alcoholic connection.
There is
also some suggestion that it was used as a dovecote for the Abbey's monastery,
which would explain the octagonal shape, and was moved to its present
site after the dissolution of the Abbey in 1538.
At the end
of the monastic era, the building became a cockpit. This was a horrible
sport but it was a place of entertainment, which gives the building more
claims to being the oldest pub.
Ye Olde Trip
To Jerusalem pub in Nottingham claim that they are the oldest because
people used to meet under the walls where the pub now is before they went
to the Crusades. It is true that their establishment also has a very healthy
history so we'd better leave it at that!
Diversion
On the right there is the Mill Stream and the Abbey Mills, one of a dozen
mills that the Ver used to power. These have now been converted for residential
use at typical St Albans prices.
This diversion
of the river worked the mill. Because the Ver was a nice swift flowing
stream, it was ideal for powering water mills. Just in St Albans alone,
there are at least six mills and every time the river has been diverted
to power them, it has moved permanently - or as permanent as a river ever
is!
It is thought
that the river was first diverted for use as water power by the Romans,
who moved the river to run a mill when they didn't need it as a defence
any more. However, remains were never found when the area was excavated
to build flats.
But the Mills
are certainly Saxon/medieval in origin, if not earlier, as in the Middle
Ages the river was harnessed to power the Abbot's corn mills here. In
around 1800, these were replaced by a silk-weaving mill.
If you stand
near the gates into the Abbey Mill flats, you can look down to where the
water runs. That is the bottom of the valley. The mill stream by the Fighting
Cocks is about 20 feet higher and that has been raised by human intervention.
The mill
stream travelled under where your feet are now, drove the wheel and went
down the mill race. This channel and the river meet again in the Westminster
Lodge area next to the flood plain at the start of the walk.
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