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Buildings(v1.0)

Historic Building Details


HB Ref No:
HB18/05/001 B


Extent of Listing:
Mill Building and gates


Date of Construction:
1820 - 1839


Address :
The Corn Mill Mary Brook 11 Raleagh Road Drummaconagher Crossgar Downpatrick Co. Down BT30 9JG


Townland:
Drummaconagher






Survey 2:
B+

Date of Listing:
14/01/1976 00:00:00

Date of De-listing:

Current Use:
Mill

Former Use
Mill

Conservation Area:
No

Industrial Archaeology:
Yes

Vernacular:
No

Thatched:
No

Monument:
No

Derelict:
No




OS Map No:
204/8

IG Ref:
J4089 5201





Owner Category


Private

Exterior Description And Setting


Extensive and largely complete, small scale ‘Georgian vernacular’ rural milling complex dating from the 18th and early 19th centuries, with water powered two storey corn and flax mills and single storey stable block- all probably mid to late 1700s, a two storey miller’s house of 1837, and subsidiary structures, including a small cottage and storehouse of c.1840s. The grouping was abandoned in the 1950s and lay largely derelict until the early 1970s. Since then it has been restored with the corn mill still operating up until the late 1990s. To the rear of the house are large two and single storey wings a section of which appears to have originally been a barn. The whole grouping has a uniform appearance with harled and whitewashed facades, slated roofs and Georgian paned sash windows and timber sheeted doors, an appearance complimented by the abundance of traditional wrought iron farm gates, stone walling and simple gate pillars. The complex is picturesquely set at the end of a lane to the W of Raleagh Road, roughly 2½ miles E of Ballynahinch. To the immediate W is the Ballynahinch River, with mill pond to the S. THE CORN MILL The corn mill (which includes the kiln house) lies to the NE corner of the complex. It is a relatively large two storey gabled building, with harled and whitewashed façade and slated roof. To the N and S are relatively large 1½ storey gabled projections, with that to S (the fan house) set ‘side on’ in double pile fashion. The mill race passes under the building to the E end. The main entrance to the mill lies to the W gable and consists of a low, right of centre timber sheeted door. To the right of this is a set of external weighing scale apparatus covered by a large gabled hood (the stone weights for the scales have been placed near the entrance to the house). To the left on the upper floor is a timber sheeted ‘loft’ door with metal hopped attached beneath. To the far left on the long N elevation is a 1½ storey gabled projection. To the N facing gable of this there is a timber sheeted door to the ground floor and a small Georgian paned window (9 panes) to the upper floor. To the left of the doorway the gable is abutted by a large square gate pillar. To the E face of the projection there is a window, as gable. To the W face there is a timber sheeted ground floor door. The N façade of the main section of the building there is a timber sheeted vehicle doorway to the left of centre. To the left of this is a window, as gable of projection but with 6 panes. To the far right is a tiny four pane window. To the first floor are five windows. The 2nd, 3rd and 5th windows are as gable of projection. The 1st window is an irregular shape as it is cut across by the roof of the projection (the projection is not original, it was added some time between c.1834-c.1858), and the 4th window is broader than the rest and has a louvered section. Ajcacent and attached to the north east corner of the building is a rendered and white washed pair of farm gateposts with wrot iron gate. To the right on the S elevation is the larger of the 1½ storey gabled projections. This is the fan house and is probably original. To its E gable is a large flat arch vehicle doorway with timber sheeted double doors. Above this is a small louvered opening. To the S face are two windows, as N elevation only larger. The rest of the S elevation, to the left of the projection, is blank. The main W gable has a window to the upper floor, as N elevation. The all sections of the roof are slated with small ventilation turret to the main ridge of main roof. Cast iron rw goods. *For the sake of simplicity only the 4 main compass points have been used.

Architects




Historical Information


The corn mill (without the smaller projection to the north), the flax mill and the stable, are all shown on the OS map of 1834 and recorded in the valuation returns of 1836. All of these buildings were graded B+ to B- by the valuers, suggesting that they believed (or were informed) that most were at least twenty years old at that point. Around 1837 the current Millars house was built and other buildings were added to the complex (see record HB18/05/001A) including a projection to the north side of the corn mill. All of these are shown on the revised OS map of 1858. The valuation of 1861 records that the house and mill were then in the possession of Christiana Silcock, who leased them from Alexander John [?and] Robert Stewart Esq. The buildings listed include: the house measuring 14½yrds x 5 x 2 (storeys), with return of 6 x 5 x 2; offices of 10 x 5 x 1, 7 x 4 x 1, 6½ x 4 x 1, 24 x 5 x 1 and 16 x 6 x 2; a ‘slated’ store of 15 x 5 x 1; a ‘slated’ shed of 6 x 4 x 1; a ‘second scutch mill slated’; a ‘shed store- wing’ of 6 x 3 x 1, and a pig house of 9½ x 3½ x 1. The house was graded ‘A’ with all of the other buildings ‘B’, suggesting that most of these were indeed the same structures listed in the 1836 valuation. The valuers also mention a ‘barn on loft’, a ‘flax mill on basement containing 3 stocks with rollers’, a ‘breast water wheel’ of 14ft with buckets of 4ft, which worked ‘briskly 4 months in the year’, and ‘4 stocks and set of rollers’. As regards the corn mill, they state that there were ‘3 pair of stones viz shelling, grinding and hard corn and one stone for dressing pearl barley’ with a 18ft breast shot wheel with buckets 5ft, which also worked ‘briskly 4 months in the year’. The Silcock family mentioned in both the 1836 and 1861 valuations are believed to have acquired Mary Brook some time around c.1790 to c.1800 from a family named Traill. The Traill connection with the area goes back to 1647, when James Traill, an officer in the Parliamentary army, was granted the townland of Drumnaconagher. His grandson, also named James, is believed to have been the first to actually settle within the townland, building a house there in 1721. Walter Harris, writing in his ‘Ancient and Present Sate of the County of Down’ in 1744 refers to this house, (then occupied by James’s son, Hamilton Traill), as ‘Marybrook, seated on a rising ground near a small lake…two miles SSE of Ballynahinch. On the face of it, this reference appears puzzling, for the present Mary Brook does not appear to be sited on rising ground, nor is it near a small lake, and it is closer to 3 miles east of Ballynahinch, rather than SSE. However, if we take into account that that ground level to the north of the flax mill drops considerably (a drop which may have been more pronounced in the mid 1700s), then this could explain the ‘rising ground’, and the ‘small lake’ may simply be a reference to a mill pond or a flood plain relating to the nearby river. The discrepancy in the mileage due to Harris’s use of the longer Irish mile (as was common at that time), and the anomalous location in relation to Ballynahinch, the result of inaccurate mapping. In fact a contemporary map entitled ‘A New and Correct Map of Ye County of Down [?produced to accompany Harris’s book], actually locates places almost directly east of Ballynahinch, such as Kilmore, considerably further south. At its height in the late 19th century, the Mary Brook complex employed around 150, not only in corn and flax milling, but also in a small hemstitching factory. The corn mill continued in full-time use until after WWI, with production coming to a halt by the 1930s. The Silcock family continued to reside at Mary Brook until the early 1950s, after which the site was abandoned and fell into decay. In the early 1970s it was acquired by Mr Lewis-Crosby, a senior figure within the National Trust, who restored the buildings and brought the corn mill back into use. The present owner acquired the complex in 1998. At the time of writing (October 2000) the corn mill is not worked. References- Primary sources 1 Harris, Walter, ‘The Ancient and Present Sate of the County of Down’ (Dublin, 1744), p.78 2 PRONI VAL/1A/3/30 OS map, County Down sheet 30, with valuation
references, (1834-c.38) 3 PRONI VAL/1B/386 First valuation, Kilmore, 1836 4 ‘OS Memoirs of Ireland, Parishes of County Down IV’ ed Angelique Day and Patrick McWilliams (QUB, 1992) (1836) 5 ‘Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory’ (Henderson, Belfast News-Letter, 1852- ) 6 PRONI VAL/2A/3/30A Revised OS map, County Down sheet 30, with valuation references, (1858-c.61) 7 PRONI VAL/2B/3/68 Second valuation, Kilmore (1861) 8 PRONI OS/6/3/30/3 OS map, 2nd edition, Co. Down sheet 30, (c.1901) Secondary sources 1 Green, E.R.R., ‘The Industrial Archaeology of County Down’ (Belfast, HMSO, 1963) 2 “Silcock’s Mills at Drumnaconagher” in ‘Mourne Observer’, 27th March 1970 3 ‘Burke’s Irish Family Records’ (London, 1976), p.1176 [Details concerning the Traill family] 4 McCutcheon, W.A., ‘The Industrial Archaeology of Northern Ireland’, (Belfast, HMSO, 1980), p.244


Criteria for Listing


Architectural Interest

A. Style B. Proportion C. Ornamentation D. Plan Form H+. Alterations enhancing the building I. Quality and survival of Interior J. Setting K. Group value

Historic Interest

W. Northern Ireland/International Interest W. Northern Ireland/International Interest Z. Rarity



Evaluation


Extensive and largely complete, small scale ‘Georgian vernacular’ rural milling complex dating from the 18th and early 19th centuries, with water powered two storey corn and flax mills and single storey stable block- all probably mid to late 1700s, a two storey miller’s house of 1837, and subsidiary structures, including a small cottage and storehouse, of c.1840s. The grouping was abandoned in the 1950s and lay largely derelict until the early 1970s. Since then it has been restored with the corn mill still operating up until the late 1990s. To the rear of the house are large two and single storey wings a section of which appears to have originally been a barn. The whole grouping has a uniform, ‘semi-vernacular’ appearance with harled and whitewashed facades, slated roofs and Georgian paned sash windows and timber sheeted doors, an appearance complimented by the abundance of traditional wrought iron farm gates, stone walling and simple gate pillars. The corn mill (with attached gates) is considered of special interest as an important constiuent part of the complex but also in its own right as a very well preserved example of this type of building. The preservation and character of the group is considered to be of national interest. The scarity of such an intact group is also of note.

General Comments


For disposition of elements making up the Mary Brook House and Mill complex - see map attached to HB18/05/001A.

Date of Survey


27 October 2000