Theme 1: Motive Power and Energy Transitions

Our work on this theme revisits longstanding debates in the historigraphy of the British Industrial Revolution, including i) the relative roles of coal and steam power in British Industrialisation; ii) the extent to which waterpower was responsible for providing mechanical power to drive machinery; iii) whether widespread adoption of fossil fuels was necessary for modern societies to break Ricardian-Malthusian constraints, and enter a period of sustained, constinuous economic growth, and iv) the relationships between modernisation, industrialisation and fossil fule use. 

Theme 2: Legacy of Landscape and Climate

Although there are abundant accounts from historical contemporaries that describe the power and influence of the physical environment on peoples everday lives, the role of the physical environment on earlier industrialisation processes in Britain remains poorly understood and often dismissed relative to other contributing social and economic factors. This theme of our research investigates how historic climate and the shapes of landscapes and rivers influenced the distribution and longevity of various mill sites across Britain before and through the first energy transition. 

Theme 3: Location and Industrial Inertia

This theme of our research explores urban-industrialisation development through a fine-grained, historic geographical lens. More specifically, we highlight how the deep roots of large textile industry growth (and, arguably, agglomeration) often arise from post-medieval centres of spinning, weaving, dyeing and bleaching in Scotland and England.

Theme 4: Britain's Missing Mills

Through a longitudinal analysis of the growth and decline of different sources of motive power over the 800-year period from the Domesday survey in 1086 to 1900, this research theme explores the missing contributions of water- and wind-power to British agriculture and industry. Using a mixed method approach, this research combines i) existing archival, historical and archaeological research on watermill and windmill numbers, ii) the power outputs during the medieval and early modern periods with population, grain consumption, with iii) water, wind and steam mill data drawn from a wide range of secondary, cartographic and archival sources from the 18th and 19th centuries.