Following on from Leri Mills, it made perfect sense to wander all of 500 yards up the road and visit this mill during my daytrip to West Wales.
Built in 1847 by the Morris family it was the only mill in Talybont to be situated on the bank of the River Celuan. The other 4 all were located along the River Leri. The wheel itself is quite 'different' to those that I've previously seen but also within the building it suggests that the mill was converted to run predominately on electricity in later years.
The mill closed in 1962 around the time of so many others - post war the importing of cotton had increased and in 1959 the UK became a net importer of cotton. It proved to be the nail in this and so many other mills at the time. Some 800 mills closed during the late 1950's - early 1960's.
Attempts to pass the mill onto the National Trust since failed but the mill was Grade II* listed in 1997 and the roof seems to be maintained. Inside its just an absolute time warp of machinery and artefacts from when it closed. It's almost too busy to really focus on where to take shots.
Visited on me own, again. Thanks to jST again for the pointers. Sadly spent the whole day taking photos with +0.67 exposure bias and it really showed up here!
Thanks for looking, some more here Celuan Mill, Talybont | Whatevers Left | UK Urbex
Built in 1847 by the Morris family it was the only mill in Talybont to be situated on the bank of the River Celuan. The other 4 all were located along the River Leri. The wheel itself is quite 'different' to those that I've previously seen but also within the building it suggests that the mill was converted to run predominately on electricity in later years.
The mill closed in 1962 around the time of so many others - post war the importing of cotton had increased and in 1959 the UK became a net importer of cotton. It proved to be the nail in this and so many other mills at the time. Some 800 mills closed during the late 1950's - early 1960's.
Attempts to pass the mill onto the National Trust since failed but the mill was Grade II* listed in 1997 and the roof seems to be maintained. Inside its just an absolute time warp of machinery and artefacts from when it closed. It's almost too busy to really focus on where to take shots.
Visited on me own, again. Thanks to jST again for the pointers. Sadly spent the whole day taking photos with +0.67 exposure bias and it really showed up here!
Thanks for looking, some more here Celuan Mill, Talybont | Whatevers Left | UK Urbex