Mill from Bryan Adams' Robin Hood video for sale

A man standing in the woods with the ruins of an old mill behind him. The ruin is made of bricks and is overgrown with ivy. The man is carrying a red briefcase.
Image caption,

The mill that appears in a Bryan Adams' music video is for sale for £75,000

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An old mill that features in the music video for Bryan Adams' song (Everything I Do) I Do It For You is up for sale with an asking price of £75,000.

Adams is featured performing the power ballad next to the silk mill, built 500 years ago near the village of Holford in Somerset, in the pop video from film maker Julien Temple.

The hit topped the charts for a record 16 weeks in 1991 and served as the theme for hit movie Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.

"It's quite an unusual property but it's an incredible place, truly magical and it has a lot of local folklore around it," estate agent Ross Walls said.

Mr Walls said the property would not be suitable for someone trying to turn it into a home, but would be ideal for someone who "wants to park up and go for a wander and escape".

He added: "Within the music video, you can see the ruin directly behind where he [Adams] was singing."

Two pictures are seen next to each other, comparing the mill as it stands now with the mill seen in the background of the Bryan Adams music video.Image source, BBC/BryanAdams.com
Image caption,

The mill can be clearly seen in the music video behind Adams

The main stipulation for where the music video would be filmed was that Mr Temple - who lived in the Quantocks - could "walk to work".

"The producer didn't think it would be such a big hit. He lived locally and said it would need to be filmed close to where he lives," Mr Walls said.

Speaking to the BBC in 2021, Mr Temple said: "Little did we know that it was going to be on Top of the Pops for months.

"I was kind of embarrassed by the length it [the video] went on, because it's not my finest hour as a film-maker."

Founded by Huguenot refugees - protestants who fled France and Wallonia (southern Belgium) from the 16th to the 18th century - Holford's silk mills once buzzed with industry, powered by the Holford River.

But nestled in the Quantock Hills, the mill fell into disrepair in 1860 after two fires destroyed it.

It is now ivy-clad and close to woodlands purchased by Paul McCartney - donated to League against Cruel Sports - as a sanctuary for wildlife.

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