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Latitude: 53.2647 / 53°15'52"N
Longitude: -3.943 / 3°56'34"W
OS Eastings: 270503
OS Northings: 375945
OS Grid: SH705759
Mapcode National: GBR 0ZXP.4F
Mapcode Global: WH544.D6ML
Plus Code: 9C5R7374+VR
Entry Name: Incline Drumhouse at Middle Bank
Listing Date: 3 November 1995
Last Amended: 3 November 1995
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 16521
Building Class: Industrial
ID on this website: 300016521
Location: Located high up above Penmaenmawr overlooking the sea and the town below; on the middle bank of the quarry, now disused.
County: Conwy
Community: Penmaenmawr
Community: Penmaenmawr
Locality: Penmaenmawr Quarry
Traditional County: Caernarfonshire
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Quarry at Penmaenmawr began on a formalised basis in the 1830s when the Graigclwyd quarry was found by Messrs Brassey and Tomkinson, though unofficial workings were established long before this date. The local granite, technically a quartz enstatite diabase, became prized for its quality and throughout the C19 and earlier C20 was used for the production of sett paving which was done on site. The quarried stone was also in demand for roadstone and railway ballast, for which it continues to be used at present. Goverment-issued mineral statistics for the year 1858 show that the two quarries then in operation, Penmean and Graigclwyd, wer producing a combined total of 134,080 tons of setts and granite. The quarring industry at Penmaenmawr attracted a sizling labour force and led directly to the establishment of the town in the second half of the C19, many of the worker's terraces of which were built by successive quarry owners like C.H Darbishire in the last decades if the century.
Late C19 counterbalance incline drumhouse; snecked rubble construction with mid-C20 concrete slab roof. The oak drum and steel cables remain in situ between two thick gable walls and the brake mechanism survives externally, though lacking its lever. Apparently one of the incline drumhouses shown on the 1888 OS map.
Listed as an exceptionally scarce survival of an intact counterbalance incline drumhouse.
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