Survey Data

Reg No

13401020


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Architectural, Social, Technical


Original Use

Mill (water)


Historical Use

Brewery


Date

1780 - 1820


Coordinates

230727, 279716


Date Recorded

24/08/2005


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Detached multiple-bay two-storey corn mill complex on skewed plan (with three adjoining blocks), built c. 1800 and altered c. 1860, having mill wheel with iron and timber fittings to north elevation and single-storey extension to west elevation. Formerly also in use as a brewery. Now disused. Pitched slate multiple-level/stepped roofs with some cast-iron rainwater goods. Corrugated-metal roof to extension. Roughcast rendered over rubble stone and roughly coursed dressed limestone walls. Square-headed window openings with timber sash windows or timber battened fittings. Square-headed door opening to the west set in segmental-headed blind recess with timber battened door. Detached single-storey with attic level outbuilding to west, built c. 1800. Roof absent. Roughly coursed dressed limestone walls. Round-headed opening to north gable end having red brick voussoirs. Detached outbuilding to northwest, built c. 1890, having lean-to corrugated-metal roof and random rubble limestone walls. Segmental-headed door opening having dressed limestone voussoirs and double leaf timber battened doors. Complex located southwest of Granard, with millstream running northeast to southwest through site before joining tributary of the Camlin River.

Appraisal

This impressive corn mill complex retains robust and attractive mill buildings and, more unusually, a mill wheel. The location of industrial mills was generally determined by the availability of water and this structure is sited close to the upper stage of the River Rhine, a tributary of the river originally forming its mill stream. The corn mill provided a basic service to local farmers in grinding and milling their corn, and was also an important source of employment for the local community. In the early nineteenth century this site appears to have been used for brewing and distilling purposes also (Ordnance Survey first edition six-inch map). The remaining structures on this site, including a possible former miller's house (13401019) to the north-west, form a pleasant group in the landscape and represent an important part of the social and architectural heritage of the area.