I was in town today picking some wood up for a spoon carving course and leaning on the wall noticed many of the coping stones were made form old grindstones.
Also where they apeared in the wall they were in groups of 4 showing that they had presumably been rolled to the site from a close by mill and split into quarters.
It is really very common to see these stones, they are everywhere, grindstones and grinders were literally the fabric of the city. This is a friends house on the outskirts of the city, next door to an old mill where they made needles. The garden wall.
And a few spares, anyone who has done much grinding will know that each of these stones represents thousands of hours work.
As far as I know there is only one full time self employed grinder left in Sheffield, Brian Alcock is a lovely bloke. This is a short film Nicola made a couple of years ago when he was teaching Grace pen knife blade grinding. With a suitably Sheffield soundtrack.
http://www.youtube.com/user/watcherknives#p/u/8/SlO-fo_xLRU
Bigger images on my blog http://greenwood-carving.blogspot.com/
Also where they apeared in the wall they were in groups of 4 showing that they had presumably been rolled to the site from a close by mill and split into quarters.
It is really very common to see these stones, they are everywhere, grindstones and grinders were literally the fabric of the city. This is a friends house on the outskirts of the city, next door to an old mill where they made needles. The garden wall.
And a few spares, anyone who has done much grinding will know that each of these stones represents thousands of hours work.
As far as I know there is only one full time self employed grinder left in Sheffield, Brian Alcock is a lovely bloke. This is a short film Nicola made a couple of years ago when he was teaching Grace pen knife blade grinding. With a suitably Sheffield soundtrack.
http://www.youtube.com/user/watcherknives#p/u/8/SlO-fo_xLRU
Bigger images on my blog http://greenwood-carving.blogspot.com/