De Mars, De Blesse

De Mars is a smock mill in De Blesse, Friesland, Netherlands which was built in 1997 on the base of an earlier mill. The mill is listed as a Rijksmonument, number 527616.[1]

De Mars, De Blesse
De Mars
Origin
Mill nameDe Mars
Mill locationSteenwijkerweg 50, 8397 LE, De Blesse
Coordinates52°50′35″N 6°02′20″E
Operator(s)Private
Year built1997
Information
PurposeCorn mill
TypeSmock mill
StoreysThree-storey smock
Base storeysThree-storey base
Smock sidesEight sides
No. of sailsFour sails
Type of sailsCommon sails
WindshaftCast iron
WindingTailpole and winch
No. of pairs of millstonesOne pair
Size of millstones1.30 metres (4 ft 3 in) diameter

History

An unnamed smock mill was built here in 1834. It drove two pairs of 1.40 metres (4 ft 7 in) diameter millstones.[2] The mill was probably built for Philips Schlecht. As built, it was a "grondzeiler", lacking the brick base it later stood on. The base was built in the late nineteenth century. An electric motor was used as auxiliary power from 1919. A sailstock broke c1925.[3] The mill machinery was dismantled c1927. The mill was demolished c1958, leaving the base standing.[2]

In 1985, the mill was bought by Mr Mars, who decided to restore the mill back to working order. The drainage mill De Zwarte Haan, which stood by De Bildtse Polder, was purchased and dismantled in April 1997. In November 1997 the mill was re-erected at De Blesse. In June 1999, a new cap was placed on the mill. This had previously been on a mill at Neustadtgödens-Wedelfeld, Germany.[3] The brake wheel from the windmill Olle Widde, Ten Post, Groningen was incorporated into the rebuild.[4] The mill was officially opened on 8 September 2000 and named De Mars.[3]

Description

De Mars is what the Dutch describe as a "stellingmolen". It is a three-storey smock mill on a three-storey base. The stage is at third-floor level, 5.85 metres (19 ft 2 in) above ground level. The smock and cap are thatched. The mill is winded by tailpole and winch. The four Common sails, which have a span of 18.20 metres (59 ft 9 in), are carried in a cast-iron windshaft which was cast by Gieterij Hardinxveld in 1998. The mill drives a single pair of 1.30 metres (4 ft 3 in) diameter millstones.[1]

Millers

Reference :-[3]

  • Philips Schlecht (1834–65)
  • Roelof Schlecht (1865-1948)

Public access

De Mars is open to the public daily except Sundays.[5]

gollark: Maybe it's stereo, actually.
gollark: The color to intensity mapping looks annoying and hard.
gollark: If you want to use the NLI model instead of a semantic search-y thing, you probably will have bad performance issues since it *does* actually have to compare all the input sentences against all the example sentences using a full pass through the model.
gollark: That just puts the tokenized tokens onto the GPU, not the model. I would expect that to just error, actually, if the model and tokens are on separate devices.
gollark: No, that thing is fine, but your *other* model is not being loaded onto the GPU.

References

  1. "Technische gegevens" (in Dutch). De Hollandsche Molen. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2010. (Click on "Technische gegevens" to view.)
  2. Stichting De Fryske Mole (1995). Friese Molens (in Dutch). Leeuwarden: Friese Pers Boekerij bv. p. 250. ISBN 90-330-1522-6.
  3. "Geschiedenis" (in Dutch). De Hollandsche Molen. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2010. (Click on "Geschiedenis" to view.)
  4. "De Blesse, Friesland" (in Dutch). Molendatabase. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  5. "Informatie" (in Dutch). De Hollandsche Molen. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2010. (Click on "Informatie" to view.)
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