Kiln - lime, Island, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Kilns
On the western side of a road in the townland of Island in north County Cork, a lime kiln sits in the kind of quiet that tends to accumulate around things that were once indispensable and then, almost overnight, were not.
Lime kilns were the workhorses of Irish agriculture for centuries, used to burn limestone at high temperatures to produce quicklime, which was then spread across acidic land to improve soil fertility. Most fell out of use with the arrival of industrially produced agricultural lime, and many have crumbled into the field margins. This one is a little different.
The kiln retains its arched recess, the opening through which fuel was fed and finished lime extracted, and its brick-lined funnel, the internal shaft where the burning took place. What makes it quietly unusual is the front wall, which, according to local knowledge, still holds an earthen core within it, a detail that speaks to vernacular construction methods that blended whatever materials were available rather than relying on dressed stone alone. In 1996, the Newmarket Community Council undertook a rebuilding of the structure, preserving it as a piece of the working agricultural landscape rather than allowing it to dissolve back into the roadside verge.