Windmill Stump, Castletaylor, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Kilns
Scattered across the Irish countryside are the truncated towers of old windmills, their sails and machinery long gone, their upper storeys collapsed or robbed for building stone.
What remains is typically a squat cylindrical stump of masonry, broad at the base and tapering slightly upward, occasionally mistaken for a castle turret or a folly by those who happen across it. The example at Castletaylor in County Galway is one such survivor, a remnant that speaks quietly to an era when wind-powered grain milling was a practical necessity in exposed, treeless parts of the west of Ireland.
Windmills were never as common in Ireland as they were in the Netherlands or eastern England, but they did appear along coastal and upland areas where rivers were too sluggish or too seasonal to power a watermill reliably. The tower mill, of which this stump is likely a remnant, was the more sophisticated successor to the earlier post mill. Its fixed stone tower housed the millstones and gearing, while only the cap at the top rotated to face the wind. In Connacht, a number of these structures date broadly to the eighteenth century, a period when improving landlords were investing in agricultural infrastructure on their estates. Castletaylor itself was an estate townland in south County Galway, and the presence of a windmill stump there fits a wider pattern of landlord-driven milling enterprise across the province. Beyond that general context, the specific history of this particular structure, its builder, its working life, and the date of its abandonment, remains to be firmly established from primary sources.