1
Bee Hive Mills, Bolton
This picture is dominated by No. 2 Mill that was built in 1902 and is hiding No. 1 Mill of 1895. The only part of No. 1 that can be seen is the projecting engine house beyond No. 2's truncated chimney that has had a metal stack inserted up it. The mill was built for cotton spinning but was latterly used as a distribution centre. By September 2019 No. 2 had been partly demolished with No. 1 to follow. The site was to be used for a new housing development.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 4 Dec 2010
0.06 miles
2
Bee Hive Mills, Bolton
Two large cotton spinning mills. No. 1 on the right was built in 1895 and retains its engine house while No. 2 on the left was built in 1902 and retains a severely truncated chimney with a modern stack up its centre. Then used as a distribution centre. In their day these were the largest spinning mills in the world. The large scar on No. 2 mill shows where its angine house has been demolished. The mills each had a large Hick, Hargreaves horizontal twin tandem triple expansion engine of 2000 horsepower.
In September 2019 the local news paper showed photographs of the site's demolition with No. 2 largely demolished by then. The site is to be housed for a new housing development.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 20 Aug 2011
0.06 miles
3
Bee Hive Mills, Bolton
Two large cotton spinning mills. No. 1 on the right was built in 1895 and retains its engine house while No. 2 on the left was built in 1902 and retains a severely truncated chimney with a modern stack up its centre. Now used as a distribution centre. In their day these were the largest spinning mills in the world.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 20 Aug 2011
0.06 miles
4
Apartments on Ramswell Close
Image: © JThomas
Taken: 23 Mar 2013
0.07 miles
5
Bee Hive Mills, Bolton
No. 2 is closest and No. 1 is beyond. They were claimed to be the largest mills in the world in their day. Now used by Home Delivery Network.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 4 Dec 2010
0.08 miles
6
Bee Hive Mills, Bolton
Two large cotton spinning mills. No. 1 on the right was built in 1895 and retains its engine house while No. 2 on the left was built in 1902 and retains a severely truncated chimney with a modern stack up its centre. In their day these were the largest spinning mills in the world. This view largely shows No. 1 mill with part of No. 2 and its chimney on the left. The No. 1 engine house has featured on urban exploration websites and contains a very large water tank to supply the firefighting system that includes diesel driven pumps in part of the engine house. The engine was a Hick, Hargreaves of Bolton horizontal twin tandem triple expansion engine of about 2000 horsepower. The mill closed and the engine was stopped in about 1956. The No. 2 mill ran until 1970 but I do not know when the engine stopped. The No. 2 mill engine house had been demolished when I took this photograph.
Bee Hive Mills were demolished in the second half of 2019 and new houses are being built on the site. This photograph was taken from a United Utilities car park that has also been demolished and that site also cleared.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 20 Aug 2011
0.10 miles
7
Kitchener Street
A candidate for the shortest named street in the UK, and with no frontagers!
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 21 Aug 2012
0.10 miles
8
Bee Hive Mills, Crescent Road frontage
The further mill is the original (No.1) mill of 1895, the nearer is No.2 mill of 1902. The architectural styles are similar but not identical.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 21 Aug 2012
0.11 miles
9
Bee Hive Mills (detail)
The left hand tower, of the original 1895 mill, formerly supported a pyramidal roof. The designation "No.1" has been added in terracotta at the time of construction of No.2 mill in 1902.
The introduction of a small amount of terracotta decoration is unusual, but it is clear that the intention was for the new mill to match the old one in general style.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 21 Aug 2012
0.11 miles
10
Bee Hive Mills
The lefthand tower is No. 1 Mill of 1895. The balustrade off to the right carries the date 1902 and states that it is Bee Hive No. 2. The bricked archway probably marks the original entrance to the mills.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 4 Dec 2010
0.11 miles