Reg No
13302002
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Historical, Technical
Original Use
Mill (water)
Date
1780 - 1820
Coordinates
215688, 286021
Date Recorded
26/07/2005
Date Updated
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Former corn mill complex, built c. 1800, comprising a single-storey corn mill to the north with attic storey and a single-storey former corn kiln to the south. Overshot composite (iron and timber) water wheel (c. 4 metres in diameter) to east elevation of corn mill, fed by elevated iron aqueduct carrying headrace. Pitched corrugated-metal roofs, with cut stone eaves course. Rubble stone walls. Square-headed window openings with louvred vents, some with wrought-iron bars. Segmental-headed door opening to building to north with battened timber door and square-headed door opening to south building, both with timber battened doors. Set adjacent to road, both building with gables facing road alignment. Gravel yard between buildings. Located to the northeast of Drumlish. Former millrace runs from the south to the north.
This simple and functional former corn mill complex retains its early form and character. Of particular interest is the survival of the composite water wheel and the elevated headrace, which provides an interesting insight into historic industrial processes. This complex probably dates to the late-eighteenth or the early-nineteenth-century, a period that saw a great boom in the Irish corn milling industry. Owned by the Rodgers family for nearly two centuries, it was a flourishing business until the 1950s, crushing corn and milling oats for a wide hinterland. The complex was in the ownership of a Thomas Rodgers c. 1854 (Valuation Office Mill Books) and consisted of a house, office, mill, kiln and land (11 acres) and had a ratable value of £17 at this time. Although this complex is now out of use, it remains an important element of the industrial and economic history of the area, and creates historic incident along the main approach road into Drumlish from the east.