As the Wheel Turns



Located beside the river Laney, the former corn mill at Bealick, County Cork was constructed by the Harding family in the closing years of the eighteenth century at a time when demand for cereal crops were high due to the Anglo-French wars. Of rubble stone, the triple-pile gable-fronted eight-bay four-storey building continued in operation throughout the 19th century and in 1899 the mill wheel’s power was harnessed to provide electricity to nearby Macroom: seemingly the town was one of the first in the country to benefit from electric street lighting. Fallen into dereliction, the building was restored a decade ago and turned into a visitor centre, although the premises were resolutely closed when the Irish Aesthete paid a call.



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One comment on “As the Wheel Turns

  1. Deborah T. Sena says:

    Tasteful treatment of the windows (for a change!). Overall look very appropriate to today’s ‘industrial farmhouse’ aesthetic. Too bad you couldn’t see the interior. Looks well care for, at least. Tall buildings/houses with gable fronts and clean/simple details are very popular now.

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