Gelli-groes Mill | |
Type: | Mill |
Location: | Caerphilly, Wales |
Coordinates: | 51.6452°N -3.1896°W |
Gbgridref: | ST 1778 9471 |
Designation1: | Grade II* |
Designation1 Offname: | Gelli-groes Mill |
Designation1 Date: | 25 May 1962 |
Designation1 Number: | 1880 |
Designation1 Free1name: | Community |
Designation1 Free1value: | Pontllanfraith |
Designation2 Free2name: | Principal area |
Designation2 Free2value: | Caerphilly |
Built: | early 17th century |
Gelligroes Mill is a water-powered corn mill in Pontllanfraith, Caerphilly county borough, South Wales, designated as a Grade II* listed building in 1962.
The mill is equipped with an overshot wheel with a cast iron frame and wooden buckets. When fully operational, it contained two pairs of rotating stones to grind barley and wheat. It was built around 1625 and was much altered during its working life. It is believed to have been the last mill operating commercially in Monmouthshire, eventually falling into disuse in the late 1980s.
As mining developed and farming declined, the business adapted to changing needs. In 1874 the owners became suppliers of seed and animal feed to smallholders, and in the 1900s Artie Moore and his brother, who were local technological pioneers, installed a generator powered by the mill wheel to charge batteries for farmers in advance of the extension of mains electricity to the area.[1]
Moore's self-built wireless receiver at the mill picked up the Italian government's declaration of war on Libya in 1911 and 's distress call in 1912.[1]
, the mill is occupied by royal candlemaker David Constable.[2]