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Bunessan
Mill Project
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The
Ross of Mull Historical Centre
propose
to refurbish the cottage next to the mill and turn it into a visitors centre and amenity
for the local community.
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With
the help of a grant from the Scottish Land Fund & Community Land Unit
we were able to purchase the Old Mill & Cottage, Bunessan in 2001.
We are currently developing this as a permanent
home for ROMHC. This will be supported by a programme of research - including
further study of Medieval or Later Rural Settlement (MOLRS) sites on the
Ross of Mull.
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Three mill wheels remain on the site. These wheels would have been imported from Brittaney, French quartz being the hardest stone required to be dressed less frequently. The stones are grooved on their grinding surfaces both to feed the grain across the stone from the centre to the outer edge and to act as cutting agents to ensure the grain is ground. The grooves needed to be regularly recut (dressed). There would have been two sets of stones, the first to remove the outer shell from the grain and the second for grinding. The gap between the second set could be adjusted to vary the fineness of the oatmeal. The shelled grains would then be spread in a layer of about 4 inches thick on the floor of the drying kiln. This floor would have been made from perforated sheets of iron, which would allow the heat from the fire below to slowly permeate the grains. |
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Occupants By 1881 Neil McPherson and his family had taken over the tenancy of the Mill and when milling ceased they used the building as a joinery workshop. Calum McPherson, Neil's son, was the last miller but, as I have already said, when he joined the Scots Guards in 1914 the mill ceased to be operational. Calum was later awarded the M B E in recognition of his work, as foreman joiner, in restoring the Abbey on Iona. |
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| Importance
of the mill in 18th century life In common with the poor world wide, even in the present day, if you lived on the Ross of Mull in the 18th century your diet would have consisted of a kind of bread and porridge made from whatever type of grain was grown locally. On the Ross of Mull that was bere meal, a mixture of a primitive type of barley, and peas. This would have been made into a flat bannock cooked over an open fire or made into porridge, perhaps mixed with kale. This would be supplemented with fish, shellfish, seaweed and, very rarely, meat. Oats were grown but they were generally considered to have been a "rent-paying" crop. Of the oats harvested by the tenant on average 30% would be used to pay the rent, 25% kept as seed for the next year. If you were lucky, that left 45% for eating. It was not unknown for landlords to have to forego rent in order to leave sufficient seed to plant in the following spring. It would be a daily task of the house wife to grind grain, they say a good housewife could have the bannocks on the table within an hour of threshing a sheaf of oats - that is stripping the grain from the stalk, removing the husk and chaff, drying the oats in a small pot over the fire, grinding them in a hand quern then shaping and cooking the bannocks. The earliest, prehistoric, method of grinding was by a saddle quern; a bowl shaped stone in which another, stone held in the palm of your hand, rubbed off the husk. This was in turn replaced by the circular quern, Brath in Gaelic, introduced to Britain by the Romans. This consisted of two flat round stones with a hole in the middle of the upper one into which the grain was poured. A wooden peg would then be fitted into another hole that would be used to turn it. This hole could either be on the edge or on top of the stone; some would have two turning pegs. These variations would be regional. Archaeologists can determine where a person came from by the way their teeth were worn: those from an area of hard stones would have well worn teeth while those from an area with softer stone would not be worn down quite so far. This happened because it was impossible to remove every small piece of stone from the meal and pieces would inevitably end up in your porridge. As late as 1876 it is reported that 'thousands' of these querns were still in use in the Highlands. One of the earliest mechanised mills, thought to have been Scandinavian in origin, was the Click Mill. The small mill wheel was placed flat in the water so that the force of the current would turn it and from this a perpendicular spindle passed through a hole in the lower millstone. The grain was poured into a hole in the upper stone through a wooden hopper. Such a mill is mentioned in Kintyre in the "Instructions by the 5th Duke of Argyll to his Chamberlain" c. 1775. When ROMHC start work on restoring the Mill in Bunessan it would be interesting if we find any evidence of this type of structure at the site. The click mill did not survive much past the 18th century, however there is one that is still in working order in Orkney. It is in the care of Historic Scotland. |
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