Survey Data

Reg No

40906205


Rating

Regional


Categories of Special Interest

Social, Technical


Original Use

Kiln


Date

1840 - 1860


Coordinates

229502, 404311


Date Recorded

04/10/2010


Date Updated

--/--/--


Description

Freestanding single-bay lime kiln on square-plan, erected c. 1860. Tapers outwards towards base. Now out of use. Constructed of rubble stone masonry. Series of staged segmental-headed recesses to the front (south-east), the former oven aperture, having brick voussoirs over. Former loading chamber on ovoid/circular-plan to the north-east having rubble masonry construction; chamber now partially collapsed. Built into rock outcrop adjacent to road and former quarries. Earthen embankment to rear, formerly giving access to loading chamber. Set back from road in rural countryside to the north-east of Raphoe.

Appraisal

This interesting and substantial former lime kiln, probably erected during the second half of the nineteenth century, survives in good condition and retains its early character. It is well-built using local rubble stone masonry and is an appealing and unassuming element of the agricultural/industrial and social heritage of County Donegal. The staged opening to the oven aperture is an unusual feature. The embankment to the rear was built/modified to allow for the easy loading of stone through an opening in the roof structure, while the aperture to the front was used to fire the oven to burn the stone and produce lime. Lime kilns appear to have come into popular use in Ireland during the eighteenth century and were a very common feature in the rural landscape up until the first decades of the twentieth century. They were used to burn limestone to produce lime, which was used as an agricultural fertilizer and spread on agricultural land, or in construction as a mortar and a render. Lime was also used for lime-washing buildings, particularly farm buildings, as it was regarded as a cleansing agent at the time. This small-scale kiln was probably in use by a local farmer and probably provided lime to small farmers etc. in the immediate environs. Small rural lime kilns started to go out of common usage during the late nineteenth-century with the advent of industrial-scale lime production facilities and improvements in the transport network, particularly the development of the railways. This lime kiln is of mid-to-late nineteenth century appearance but appears to have replaced an earlier kiln to the same site (Ordnance Survey first edition six-inch map of c. 1837). This simple feature is an interesting feature in the landscape to the north-east of Raphoe, and is an integral element of the built heritage of the local area.