Reg No
22805030
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Historical, Social, Technical
Original Use
Mill (water)
Date
1790 - 1810
Coordinates
239401, 106200
Date Recorded
22/07/2003
Date Updated
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Detached five-bay four-storey rubble stone corn mill, c.1800, on a cranked plan with two-bay four-storey lower end bay to north-west. Now disused and part derelict. Pitched slate roofs with clay ridge tiles, cut-stone coping, and traces of cast-iron rainwater goods on cut-stone eaves. Random rubble stone walls with lime mortar, and section of slate hanging to rear (south) elevation. Square-headed window openings with no sills, and rubble stone and red brick voussoirs. Traces of timber fittings. Square-headed door openings with rubble stone voussoirs, and remains of timber fittings. Segmental-headed integral arch over mill race with rubble stone voussoirs, and squared rubble stone soffits having traces of lime render over. Set back from road in own grounds with overgrown grounds to site. (ii) Remains of detached three-bay two-storey rubble stone outbuilding, c.1800, to north-west. Now in ruins. Pitched roof now gone with no rainwater goods surviving on squared rubble stone eaves. Random rubble stone walls (now partly collapsed) with lime mortar. Openings not discernible. (iii) Mill race, c.1800, to site retaining fragments of original mechanisms. (iv) Gateway, c.1850, to south comprising pair of unpainted rendered piers with wrought iron gate having sections of wrought iron flanking railings on rendered plinth wall, and rendered terminating piers.
A substantial corn mill building that, although now disused and in the early stages of dereliction, remains an important component of the architectural heritage of Kilmacthomas, representing an early industrial centre in the locality. Now long disused, the basic form and massing of the structure remain intact, together with some important salient features and materials, including the remains of timber fittings to the openings, and some slate hung sections to one elevation. A range of related structures to the grounds enhance the group and setting qualities of the site, and include a mill race of some technical significance.