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Riele Mill in Wormhout dans le Nord

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Moulin
Moulin à vent
Nord

Riele Mill in Wormhout

    629 Chemin Potters Straete
    59470 Wormhout
Ownership of the municipality
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Moulin de Riele à Wormhout
Crédit photo : Michel.ragons - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1756
Construction of mill
1891
Movement of mill
1921
Purchase and catering
1939
Installation of diesel engine
1966
Municipal legislation
1977
Historical monument classification
1982-1983
Restoration by ARAM
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Moulin (Case E 740) : inscription by order of 24 October 1977

Key figures

Philippe François Desmyttère - Carpenter Builder of the mill in 1756.
Ignace Coudeville - Farmers Initial sponsor of the mill.
Abel Deschodt - Owner and restaurant Buyer in 1921, donor in 1966.

Origin and history

The Deschodt Mill, also known as the Riele Mill, is a windmill located in Wormhout, northern department. Built in 1756 by the carpenter Philippe François Desmyttère for the farmer Ignace Coudeville, it is characterized by an inscription in Dutch on its structure. This pivot-type flour mill, with four wings of 23 meters wide, was initially set up in a rural environment, between the said places of Riet Veld and Kieken Put, about 3 km southeast of the village.

In 1891, the mill was moved 200 metres by its owner. In 1921 he was bought by Abel Deschodt, who began his restoration and installed a diesel engine there in 1939. After being bequeathed to the municipality of Wormhout in 1966, it was restored between 1982 and 1983 by the Regional Association of Friends of Mills (ARAM). Since 1977, the mill has been included in the inventory of historical monuments, demonstrating its heritage importance.

The Deschodt Mill illustrates the evolution of milling techniques and the adaptation of windmills to local agricultural needs. Its mechanism, always functional, allows to understand the central role of these infrastructures in the production of flour and the rural economy of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Today, it remains a symbol of the industrial and architectural heritage of Hauts-de-France.

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