Kiln - lime, Ballingarry, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Kilns
Scattered across the Irish countryside in various states of decay, lime kilns are among the most overlooked of rural industrial monuments.
The one at Ballingarry in County Galway is a quiet example of a structure type that was once essential to farming life across the island. A lime kiln, at its simplest, is a stone-built furnace in which limestone was burned at high temperatures to produce quicklime, a material used to neutralise acidic soils and to make mortar. For generations of Irish farmers, access to a working kiln could mean the difference between productive land and barren ground.
The source material for this particular kiln is thin, and honesty requires acknowledging that. What can be said is that lime kilns of this kind were built and used extensively from the seventeenth century onward, with a peak of activity during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when agricultural improvement became a preoccupation of landlords and tenant farmers alike. Many were constructed close to outcrops of limestone or near the fields they were intended to serve. The Galway landscape, with its limestone-rich geology, was well suited to this kind of small-scale industrial activity, and kilns like the one at Ballingarry were typically communal or farm-specific structures, built to last but rarely maintained once cheaper imported lime became available in the late nineteenth century.