The Three Mills are former working mills and an island of the same name on the River Lea. It is one of London’s oldest surviving industrial centres. The mills lie in the London Borough of Newham, but despite lying on the Newham side of the Lea, access is principally from the western, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, side of the river.
The Clock Mill at Three Mills
House Mill from across the water
House Mill and the Miller's House at low tide
Three Mills Green and open playspace on Three Mills Island
The River Lea is in the East of England and Greater London. It originates in Bedfordshire, in the Chiltern Hills, and flows southeast through Hertfordshire, along the Essex border and into Greater London, to meet the River Thames at Bow Creek. It is one of the largest rivers in London and the easternmost major tributary of the Thames.
River Lea at Hertford Basin
A pedestrian suspension bridge spans the boating lake created where the widened river flows through Wardown Park in Luton.
The River Lea at Great Amwell, home of the Amwell Magna Fishery, was fished by Izaak Walton – author of The Compleat Angler
River Lea, Diversion, and Flood Relief channels at Tottenham