Mill, Rathbraghan, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Mills
At Rathbraghan in County Sligo, a low section of stonework barely two metres high is almost all that remains of what was once considered among the finest mills in Ireland.
The fragment, roughly fifteen metres long and running north to south, forms part of the original east wall, built directly into the base of a steep hill. To its west, grass-covered mounds of rubble mark where the rest of the structure once stood, tucked into a narrow strip of land between the hillside and a stream, exactly the kind of confined, water-adjacent site that millers sought out.
The scale of what has been lost becomes clearer when you consider how the mill was described during a survey carried out between 1633 and 1636, which recorded it as a "good English mill here, one of the best in the country", a phrase cited by the Sligo antiquarian W. G. Wood-Martin in his 1889 work on the county. The term "English mill" in this period typically referred to a vertical waterwheel mill, a technology associated with the plantation era and distinguished from the older horizontal-wheeled mills, sometimes called Norse or Celtic mills, that had long been used across Ireland. To be ranked so highly at that particular moment suggests the Rathbraghan mill was a substantial and relatively sophisticated installation, serving what would have been a significant local agricultural economy. The precise circumstances of its demolition are not recorded.