Benholm Mill

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Benholm Mill

Kincardineshire

The Mill of Benholm - geograph.org.uk - 400954.jpg
The Mill of Benholm
Type: Watermill
Location
Grid reference: NO80666908
Location: 56°48’46"N, 2°19’8"W
History
Built 18th century
Watermill
Information
Condition: Restored
Owned by: The Mill of Benholm Trust

Benholm Mill in Kincardineshire is a restored and fully working water-powered meal mill sited in ancient woodland near Johnshaven (thirteen miles south of the county town, Stonehaven).

The mill is amongst the farmlands of made famous by local author, Lewis Grassic Gibbon in his book Sunset Song. The mill itself featured as Long Rob's Mill in the television serialisation of this novel. It is a category A listed building.[1]

History

Benholm is now the only surviving traditional water-powered meal mill in this part of Kincardineshire. For hundreds of years it and numerous similar mills throughout Scotland were of vital importance to the rural community as the suppliers of the main food item. At its peak it produced oatmeal, bruised oats and hashed oats for an area extending from Montrose in Angus in the south to Barras and Catterline in the north and inland to Laurencekirk and Fordoun.

Current status

The mill building was in partial use until 1982 and was gradually restored to its present state from 1986 onwards. Parts of it date back to the 18th century, though there are records of milling at Benholm as early as the 13th century. Other buildings on site are of mainly Victorian origin. The whole complex, with mill dam, reed bed, miller's croft and woodland walk, is now a local heritage visitor centre. The mill used to belong to Mr John Alexander Scott who resided at the Kirkton of Benholm farm. Benholm itself today is a small hamlet made up of a church, the mill visitor centre/cafe and private dwellings.

The Mill of Benholm Trust worked with the local council to provide work experience and training for adults with special needs, in catering, horticulture, furniture restoration, shop and office work. In April 2014 the mill closed due to health and safey issues.[2]

The trust has latterly been working with the North East Scotland Preservation Trust further to restore the mill.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Benholm Mill)

References