The river has provided water power to a number of water mills. The furthest upstream was Buxton or Fairfield Mill. The first known mill on the site was built in the 13th century, but was damaged maliciously in the 1490s. There is still a significant drop in the surface level of the river at this point. Subsequently, a medieval mill was erected, probably on the same site. It is shown on maps dating from 1631 and 1791, as well as on the Fairfield Enclosure map of 1772. It is not known when it was demolished. Maps show a small corn mill close to the Ashwood Dale lime works. Dale End sawmill was powered by a breastshot iron waterwheel, in diameter and wide. It was located on the north side of the stone building, but the wheel is now derelict, although the building is in use as a store. It was built some time before 1883, and the weir and water channels are still visibile. Wye Dale water turbine was used to pump water from the river to Pictor Hall and local farms. The small stone building has a date stone showing 1893. Ordnance Survey maps from 1896 to 1900 labelled the building as a hydraulic pump, but in 1937-1938 they showed it as a steam pump. At Wormhill there was a flour mill to the south of the former
Millers Dale railway station, on the north bank of the river.
King John granted a mill at Wormhill to Daniel Puiceman in the late 12th century, but it is not known if the later mill was built on the same site. The present building appears to have been built in three stages, with the oldest dating from 1860 and the newest from the 1920s. All three were modified in the 1970s, and they now house a craft centre. None of the original machinery remains. Tideswell corn mill may be located at the site of a mill mentioned in the
Domesday Book in 1086. The present building was built by the Devonshire Estate, and for many decades was worked by members of the Dakin family, who eventually bought the site in the late 18th century. The last miller was George Dakin, who used the mill to make meal for almost 70 years until he died in 1912/13. After standing derelict for many years, the site was bought by
Severn Trent Water Authority in 1970. The
Arkwright Society carried out a survey of the building, and the machinery was removed, to be re-erected at Cromford Corn Mill, before the main structure was demolished in 1973, to make way for a borehole. The waterwheel was manufactured in
Sheffield by Thomas Cavil in the 1860s. It was a low breast-shot wheel, with an iron frame, and was in diameter by wide. It was retained in situ, and was refurbished by Severn Trent in 1997, although the mill race remains dry. Litton Mill, at Slack Side,
Litton was built on the site of an earlier mill, as Senior's map of 1611 shows a corn mill there. However, around 1782 it was replaced by a water-powered cotton spinning mill built by Ellis Needham and his partners. This lasted until 1870, when a fire destroyed most of it, although some of the 1780s buildings remain. The mill was rebuilt in 1874, and continued to operate until 1997. The site retains an undershot water wheel, of unknown date, which was fed directly from the river, without the benefit of a mill pond. There is also a chimney and flue, located higher up on the side of the dale, which is the only one of its type in good condition in the Peak District. Gas to light the mill and the nearby village was produced in a gas house, constructed between 1820 and 1840. By 2002, this was in a very dilapidated state, but has subsequently been repaired and altered. The mill building has been converted into flats. A litle further downstream are the remains of a water-powered pump. It was used to pump spring water to a reservoir, was powered by a water wheel which was in diameter by wide, and was associated with Lees Rake and Burfoot Mines.
Below Cressbrook Richard Arkwright built a cotton mill at Cressbrook in 1779, which only lasted until 1785, when it burnt down. His son, also called RIchard, bought the site in 1787, and started rebuilding the mill soon afterwards. This in turn was replaced by a new mill building between 1814 and 1816, constructed by William Newton with 12 bays and four storeys. To celebrate the coronation of
Queen Victoria, the building was embellished with a clock and cupola in 1837. Many of the workforce were poor apprentices, who were better treated than those at nearby Litton Mill. They were housed in an Apprentice house, built in 1795. Cotton production ceased in 1967, after which the building was used by a stone-cutting business. When first built, the mill was powered by water from Cress Brook, as the Duke of Devonshire owned the water rights on the Wye. The next mill site downstream is known as Ashford Bobbin Mill, although there is no known documentary evidence to support a local tradition that its early use was to produce bobbins for the nearby cotton industry. It appears to have been used as a bone mill, and then as a saw mill. Three water wheels survive, two to power the mills, and a third smaller one to pump spring water up to the village of
Sheldon. In 1979, the Arkwright Society restored the buildings. The Black Marble Mill at
Ashford-in-the-Water had a long history, as Thomas Accres constructed "an engyne for the sawing of blackstone" in 1595. Henry Watson built a new marble works on the site in 1748, and in 1751 patented a machine for cutting and polishing marble. A leat supplied three mill races, each with their own building and water wheel. The business was not a commercial success, until work on
Chatsworth House started in the 1820s, when the mill supplied marble doorways and other marble fittings for the project. Two of the water wheels were replaced by water turbines in 1884 and 1885, although the third wheel was retained, as the building it powered had been rented out for the manufacture of combs. Production of marble products ceased in 1905, and little remains of the buildings, although the leats and turbines are still visible. A second marble mill was built by George Redfern of Ashford-in-the-Water around 1846. It was known as Batch Mill or the Derbyshire Marble Works. A new weir was constructed in the river, at right angles to an existing weir which fed water to Ashford Corn Mill. A covered leat delivered water to the mill, which was housed in old farm buildings behind Great Batch Hall. The water wheel was replaced by a turbine around 1860, and production ceased before 1890. Ashford Corn Mill is a "L"-shaped building, dating from the 18th century, with additions made in the 19th and 20th centuries. It is also known as Flewitt's Corn Mill, and the complex includes a drying kiln. It was originally powered by two undershot water wheels, one made of iron and the other of wood. These were removed around 1900, and replaced by a single turbine, manufactured by
Gilkes of
Kendal. This drove three sets of stones, of which two remain, as they were replaced by rollers. The mill continued operating commercially until the 1970s, making it one of the last in the country to use water power. It is in good condition, with most of the machinery and the kiln still intact. A two-year project to refurbish the building was competed in 2017, and won the
Peak District National Park Planning Award for Conservation in 2018. The mill has featured on
Channel 4 TV's
Remarkable Renovations programme, and on the
BBC's
Countryfile. The building is rented out as holiday accommodation. As part of the renovation, the water turbine was refurbished, enabling the mill to be self-sufficient for electrical power.
Lower river Richard Arkwright rented land for Lumford Mill from Philip Gell in 1777. There were some difficulties with water rights, but once these were resolved, he constructed a four-storey cotton mill powered by a single water wheel, fed by a leat from the river. This may not have been adequate, as Arkwright built a reservoir, and then two more reservoirs to ensure a good water supply. Arkwright and his son made at least three alterations to the course of the river, which resulted in legal disputes with the Duke of Rutland. The water wheel was replaced by a larger one in 1827, and in 1840 a larger mill race was built, allowing the reservoirs to be filled in. A second water wheel was added in 1852. Water power was probably supplemented by steam power, as a gas plant was built on the site in 1844. Much of the mill burnt down in 1868, and a new mill was constructed on a slightly smaller scale. Cotton production ceased in 1896, and the site was bought by DP Batteries in 1898. The water wheels failed in 1955, and were replaced by a water turbine manufactured by
Gilbert Gilkes & Gordon. The site was sold to W Fernehough Ltd in 1970. The mill leat for Victoria Mill starts where the tailrace from Lumford Mill ends. A mill was mentioned in the Domesday Book, and it is probable that the same site was used for the more recent mill. The building was constructed around 1800 and was used for milling corn. The leat fed a breast-shot water wheel which was in diameter and wide. It continued to be used for grinding corn and animal feed until after 1945, although the precise date at which production stopped is not known. The building has iron-framed windows and a lucam for raising sacks of grain to the upper floors. The water wheel dated from around 1850, and was removed from its pit in 1971 to be restored, but this did not happen, and it has rusted away. Several of the windows next to the road had been filled in, but during restoration in 1970 were reglazed using iron framed windows removed from the rear of the building. The sluice and water wheel are separately listed. The sluice dates from the early 19th century, but may have been altered when a new wheel was fitted in 1850. It is constructed of dressed gritstone, and has iron machinery. Rutland Works was another site where marble was processed, It was close to Bakewell Bridge, and when built in 1847, consisted of two stone buildings, with a water wheel between them. There was a timber yard behind the Manners Hotel, but this was severely damaged in the 1880s, after which the marble mill was extended, to include a saw mill. A water driven turbine was installed at a similar time. The works processed black marble, a type of carboniferous limestone which can be polished to produce an attractive black or grey stone. The stone-cutting machines remained in place until 1996. The final mill on the river is Caudwell's Mill at
Rowsley. Records confirm that there was a mill at Rowsley in 1339, and in the 1500s there were two mills, one a corn mill and the other a fulling mill. A saw mill replaced the fulling mill between 1799 and 1840, but was abandoned around 1871. The corn mill ceased operating in 1858. Both were demolished and a new corn mill was constructed by John Caudwell in 1874. Four breast-shot water wheels provided the power to eight pairs of stones. However, roller milling arrived in Britain in 1877, and the mill was updated in 1881, when rollers replaced the mill stones. A turbine replaced the water wheels in 1887. Improvements continued to be made in the early 20th century. An American Little Giant turbine was installed in 1898, new rollers were fitted in 1905, most of the machinery was updated in 1914, and a Francis twin turbine was installed at the same time. Two purifiers were added in 1932. The building is
grade II* listed. The mill ceased to be used commercially in 1974, but was taken over by a charitable trust. An electric motor was fitted to power the machinery, but all the other original equipment was retained. ==Ecology==