Aberdeenshire HER - NO99NW0019 - MILL OF FINDON

Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO99NW0019
NameMILL OF FINDON
NMRS Card No.NO99NW30
NMRS Numlink37209
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Incomplete
Details Farmstead and mill complex dating from the early 19th century. The mill is a 3-storey rubble building on an L-plan, including some machinery and an internal overshot wheel. There is a lade and dam on the west side. Also a U-plan steading open to the southeast with two additional rectangular buildings are shown on the 1st and 2nd edition OS maps. The steading, mill and rectangular building to south of steading survive, but the second building to east of steading is not shown on current maps. The mill building has been converted to a dwelling.
Last Update04/09/2020

National Grid Reference: NO 9258 9702


Easting: 0, Northing: 0

Compiler 
Date of Compilation 

Event Details


Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact


Ecofact

Samples 
Palynology 
Ecofact Notes 

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
FARMSTEADS  D100
LADESMILLSITE OFE100
DAMSMILL F100
MILLS L-PLANA100
MACHINERY REMAINS OFB100
WHEELS OVERSHOTC100

Google Map for NO99NW0019


National Status

National Status
Listed Building, Category C

Regional Status


Photo Details


Bibliographic Detail

Bib Ref NoTitleAuthorDateOthersEditorPublishedDetailsDate MDate Y
00870Industrial Archaeology of ScotlandJR Hume1977  London220  

Location

Historic Administrative Area Name Banchory Devenick
Positional Accuracy Centred at
Buffer Zone 15-20m
Buffer Type Bespoke
Capture Scale Unknown
Spatial Feature Type Polygon: Unknown Extent

Environment

Constraints Privately owned, access by arrangement - easy access.
Altitude5
Geology 
Topography Gentle slope
Aspect 1SE
Aspect 2 Open
Current Land Use Agricultural
Vegetation
Soil Type 
Hydrology 

Measurements

Plan 
Shape 1
Shape 2
Diameter 
Length 
Width 
Thickness 
Depth 
Area 
Height 

Historic Land Use


Period Details

PeriodOrderProbabilityRadiocarbon DatesDate BuiltDate of DestructionDate of Loss
Post-Medieval (from 1560 AD) A100    

Period Notes

Period Notes Alterations to mill and steading 1885.

Architect Details

Architect Details Alterations by Walker and Beattie 1885. George James Walker was born in 1835 or 1836, the son of Robert Walker, farmer and his wife Margaret Gordon. Nothing is known of his training or early career. He was a distant relative of David Walker who was in partnership with the Aberdeen architect, civil engineer and garden designer James Forbes Beattie in the 1820s and 1830s (see separate entry for the earlier Walker & Beattie practice). George James Walker formed a second Walker & Beattie partnership in 1877, the year of the death of James Forbes Beattie, with the latter's son James Alexander Beattie. The younger Beattie had been born to James Forbes Beattie and his wife Jane Byres Copland about 1846. He seems to have been an apprentice or assistant in his father's office and at some point in or before 1874 had been taken into partnership as James F Beattie & Sons. This practice had probably continued until his father's death on 10 January 1877 at Ecclesgreig, St Cyrus, Kincardineshire when he left heritable estate of £27,833 16s 11d. It is probable that the new firm of Walker & Beattie inherited the practice of James Forbes Beattie. In about 1888 or 1889 (not 1913 as Muriel Barnett writes), the Walker & Beattie partnership was dissolved. Walker subsequently merged his practice with the essentially similar one of Thomas Duncan, perhaps the better to compete with Jenkins & Marr, another firm specialising in agricultural business which was also formed from the merger of two separate rural practices. The new partnership was known as Walker & Duncan. Beattie worked on his own thereafter until his death aged 68 on 20 February 1914. Coincidentally George James Walker died on the same day. George James Walker was the seventh-generation owner of Portlethen farm and was a fine breeder and judge of Aberdeen-Angus cattle and a crack shot, representing Scotland on more than one occasion.

Maritime Archaeology

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