Bursledon Windmill is Hampshire's only working windmill and was built in 1814 by a Mrs. Phoebe Langtry, replacing an earlier post mill which was built about 1768. After falling into despair, it was restored and then re-opened in 1990 as a working windmill and heritage visitor attraction. The machinery of the earlier mill was incorporated into the new mill. The mill was working until the 1880s initially by Mrs. Langtry's son, Wiliam Langtry. John Cove and his family worked this mill between 1847 and 1871. The UK census shows he had worked a mill in Portsmouth and originally came from Wiltshire. He and his wife Susannah Emmett both came from Wiltshire and are responsible for the nearly all the Cove family in Southampton. His daughter Mary married a Jarvis and ran the Jolly Sailor public house in
Hamble, one of his other daughters ran a market garden at the end of Windmill Lane and his son John Cove became a farm labourer. The last miller was George Gosling who bought the mill in 1872. ==Decline of the windmill==