Kiln - lime, Tooreenglanahee, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Kilns
Scattered across the Irish countryside, lime kilns are among the most quietly overlooked industrial remnants in the landscape.
The example at Tooreenglanahee, in County Cork, is one of countless such structures that survive, often half-buried in field margins or hidden beneath ivy, as evidence of an agricultural practice that was once absolutely central to Irish rural life. A lime kiln was a stone-built furnace used to burn limestone at high temperatures, producing quicklime that farmers spread on acidic soils to improve fertility. At a time when imported fertilisers were unavailable or unaffordable, a working kiln was a serious local asset.
Lime burning in Ireland reached its peak during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when improving landlords and tenant farmers alike invested in the practice as part of broader efforts to increase agricultural output. Limestone and fuel, usually coal or turf, were loaded in alternating layers from the top of the kiln, and the burnt lime was drawn out from an opening at the base called the draw hole. The resulting quicklime was caustic and had to be handled carefully, either slaked with water before spreading or applied directly to fields. Many kilns were built close to outcrops of limestone and to tracks or lanes that allowed the heavy raw material to be carted in. The townland name Tooreenglanahee, derived from the Irish, reflects the deeply local character of these structures; they were built to serve the immediate land around them, not any wider industrial purpose.
Because the source material for this particular kiln is limited, precise dates and ownership details are not available. What can be said is that its survival as a recorded monument in the Cork landscape places it within a broader pattern of post-medieval agricultural infrastructure that is slowly receiving the archaeological attention it deserves.