Llwyntidmon Mill And Attached House is a Grade II listed building in the Shropshire local planning authority area, England. First listed on 21 October 1987. Mill, house. 3 related planning applications.

Llwyntidmon Mill And Attached House

WRENN ID
gaunt-pavement-jackdaw
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Shropshire
Country
England
Date first listed
21 October 1987
Type
Mill, house
Source
Historic England listing

Description

A mill, now disused, and an attached house, probably dating largely to the 17th century, with extensions from the mid-19th century and later alterations. The house is timber frame construction on a high rendered plinth and painted brick, with a graded slate roof. Originally two cells, it was extended to the left in the mid-19th century to join the mill, with further 19th-century additions to the front and right. The house has one storey and an attic, featuring 20th-century metal casements, including two gabled eaves dormers on each side and a further dormer in the addition linking the house with the mill. A small window is located to the left of the ground floor, set within an infilled 19th-century segmental-headed opening. Access is through a 20th-century half-glazed door in a 19th-century addition to the left, and another 19th-century addition to the front. The original house section has a former integral end stack to the left, and the 19th-century additions feature end stacks to the front and right.

The mill, dating to the mid-19th century, is constructed of red brick with a slate roof. It is two storeys high with a gable-lit attic and a dentilled eaves cornice. It features four infilled segmental-headed windows to the first floor, alternating with segmental-headed boarded doors to the ground floor. A lower bay to the left has a wide segmental-headed arch marking the position of the former wheel. Inside the house, the left ground-floor room of the original 17th-century section has twin chamfered spine beams with straight-cut stops, a large infilled inglenook fireplace, and jowled wall posts in the centre of the room. A cross wall exposes a timber frame with square panels. The right room is a semi-basement, accessed by a datestone inscribed "1702" used as a step. The mill was inaccessible at the time of resurvey in November 1986 and was reported to contain no original equipment.

Detailed Attributes

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