Goldthorpe Mill is a Grade II listed building in the Bassetlaw local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 April 1985. Mill, house.
Goldthorpe Mill
- WRENN ID
- winter-mullion-clover
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- Bassetlaw
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 12 April 1985
- Type
- Mill, house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
This is a house, originally a water mill, dating to the early 18th century, with alterations and additions made in the later 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. The building is constructed of dressed coursed rubble, with a pantile roof. It features a single rendered ridge stack and a large brick rear wall stack. A ground floor ashlar band runs across the front, interrupted by a single window. The main part of the house is two storeys plus a garret and has four bays, with evidence of heightening above the first-floor windows. A doorway has a stable door set within a rock-faced stone surround. To the right is a single glazing bar Yorkshire sash window with a matching surround. To the left, a single 20th-century glazing bar casement has a stone lintel and left stone jamb. Further left is a large four-light glazing bar casement that was inserted into an original opening, retaining the remains of the right stone jamb. Above are three two-light glazing bar Yorkshire sashes in rough stone surrounds. Originally, all windows were fitted with stone mullions. In the garret are single two-light glazing bar casements with rough stone surrounds and single stone mullions.
To the right of the main building is a single-story wing constructed of dressed coursed rubble and pantile roof. This wing has three bays, with a segmental doorway containing a wooden door, and two large arched openings with double plank doors. To the left is a two-story, two-bay extension, built in the late 18th century, with a ground floor sill band. This extension has a doorway with a 20th-century glazed door and a rough stone surround. To its left is a single glazing bar casement with similar stone jambs and a concrete lintel. Above is a matching casement with a rough stone surround. There is an Ordnance Survey 'sea-level' mark below the ground floor window. Set back to the left is a single-story, single-bay, 20th-century extension constructed of dressed coursed rubble and pantile roof, and featuring a single casement window.
The rear of the building has a single glazing bar casement with a rough stone surround, along with a large blocked doorway of similar appearance, now containing a small wooden door. Above is a single glazing bar casement with a matching surround. Further to the right are various 18th and 19th-century extensions.
The interior retains a late 19th-century steel waterwheel, along with remnants of earlier wooden gear wheels and power transmission systems. Some rooms still feature stop-chamfered spine beams with run-out stops.
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