Trinity Mill is a Grade II listed building in the Cotswold local planning authority area, England. First listed on 12 February 1988. Mill and house.

Trinity Mill

WRENN ID
gentle-rampart-curlew
Grade
II
Local Planning Authority
Cotswold
Country
England
Date first listed
12 February 1988
Type
Mill and house
Source
Historic England listing

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Description

Trinity Mill is a former corn mill and miller's house dating from the late 18th to early 19th century. It is constructed from coursed squared and dressed limestone with a concrete tile roof and limestone rubble stacks that have been repaired in brick. The house has a rectangular plan with a lean-to extension at the rear. The mill building is a long rectangular structure located at the right gable end of the house. There is a 20th-century flat-roofed extension at the back, which is not of special interest.

The house features two storeys and an attic with a central gable. The entrance front has three windows and is lit by two and three-light wooden casements that have horizontal glazing bars and deep stone lintels. The front door is a 19th-century four-panelled design, with the upper two panels glazed, positioned off-centre to the right within a part-glazed, gabled slate-hung porch. Gable-end stacks are present.

The mill building also has two storeys and an attic, with a single-storey open-fronted outbuilding located at the far right. The mill race runs beneath the mill at right angles, passing under two round-headed arches and issuing out from a further round-headed archway approximately seven meters south of the mill. The ground floor includes two 2-light casements with leaded panes and three plank doors. A small cast iron wheel with curved spokes projects from the wall on the off-centre left. There are stone steps leading up to a plank door at first floor level on the far right, and the first floor features single light and 2-light casements. Most windows have segmental brick heads.

Inside, there is a cast iron undershot mill wheel that retains all its gearing, linked to two millstones and a sack hoist leading to the bin floor in the attic. An early leaded pane window with a scratched inscription reading '1811 G.H' is located on the north side at first floor level. The site has been used for milling since the 11th century, and although the present mill ceased production around 1940, it remains in working order. The interior of the house has not been inspected.

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