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Latitude: 51.3281 / 51°19'41"N
Longitude: 0.8885 / 0°53'18"E
OS Eastings: 601336
OS Northings: 162740
OS Grid: TR013627
Mapcode National: GBR SVX.PFP
Mapcode Global: VHKJP.CW27
Plus Code: 9F328VHQ+6C
Entry Name: East Crystallising House (Building 11) at Former Marsh Gunpowder Works, Workshop Area
Listing Date: 14 December 2001
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1389579
English Heritage Legacy ID: 488267
ID on this website: 101389579
Location: Oare, Swale, Kent, ME13
County: Kent
District: Swale
Civil Parish: Faversham
Built-Up Area: Faversham
Traditional County: Kent
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Kent
Tagged with: Architectural structure
FAVERSHAM
TR 06 SW HAM ROAD
659/6/10021 East Crystallising House (Building 11)
14-DEC-01 at former Marsh Gunpowder Works, Work
shop Area
GV II
Crystallising house at saltpetre refinery, part of gunpowder works, now store. 1789. Timber framed, clad with weatherboard, with corrugated iron hipped roof.
PLAN: Long narrow plan.
EXTERIOR: Single storey, now open to NE side (morticing for former louvres clearly visible), 12 bays long with strutted timber posts, covered to the ends and rear with louvred openings and a central doorway.
INTERIOR: Strutted king posts ties, corner ties, and matchboard lining to roof.
HISTORY: The Marsh works were part of the Royal Gunpowder Factory which was established outside Faversham in 1786 after an explosion in the town, to remove some of the more dangerous processes. They played an important part in the improvement of the British gunpowder leading up to and during the Napoleonic Wars, under William Congreve. The saltpetre refinery which was built 1789 as part of Congreve's successful drive to improve the ingredients of British powder. It was privatised after the war, and closed in the 1920s.
The crystallising house was where saltpetre was crystallised out of the solution which had been treated in the nearby refining house (qv), by placing it in racks of vats to cool, hence the open structure. It is the best preserved building on this historically important site, and survives as a particularly impressive example of a late C18 industrial building through the close relationship between the structure and the process. It forms part of a discrete, coherent group of late C18-early C19 industrial buildings for refining saltpetre, the best preserved of this type in the country comparable with French and Swedish examples.
(Wayne Cocroft, Dangerous Energy. The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture. Swindon (English Heritage), 2000, pp. 54-67)
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