The 1910 map locates Bollin Hall east of the railway, and close to the distinctly dog-legged road (which on the 1882 map starts by the second 'l' in the words Mill Lade) which heads in a NE direction to a wooded area. Given that distinctive location, I don't really think that the obscured word in 1882 can be anything other than Hall; also, if it were 'Mill' the dot to the 'i' would surely be visible, even if the greater part of the letter is otherwise obscured.
And I agree, the identity of 'Bollin Mill' could nevertheless still be open to question. And 1891, 1901 and 1911 don't help: two have Kitchen living at Prescott House on Manchester Road, the other merely on Manchester Road...
As for the plurality of mills at Wilmslow Bridge (hanes teulu), I've also now found mention of them, in the context of 'more effectually repairing and improving the Road from Ardwick Green near Manchester to the Bridge at the Corn Mills at Wilmslow' (House of Lords sessional papers.... 1845). The corn mill on Bollin Walk was a 4-storey structure, so perhaps it was milling on a large scale - hence mills?

Does anyone have access to a copy of Andrew Pearson's history of Wilmslow ('Wilmslow past and present') which was first published in 1901, reprinted in the 1970s? He was a local man and historian, and might just possibly make specific reference to 'Bollin Mill'.
Birtle
