History
Kilgetty Ironworks was planned from 1846 by the Pembrokeshire Coal and Iron Company. Four, or possibly six, furnaces were anticipated. The works commenced production in 1849 with two furnaces, only one of which was then brought into blast. A year later production was halted due to an explosion. Grove Colliery was opened in 1856 to supply coal. Success was only moderate, and by 1861 the Company was in difficulties; in 1863 it was acquired by C H Vickerman and a brief period of prosperity commenced. In this heyday the works were pictured by M S Whatley. The furnaces were blown out in 1867, and Vickerman contemplated selling. For this purpose an inventory of the works was drawn up in 1872; James Carlton and the Bonville's Court Coal and Iron Company purchased them and brought in new investment. In 1873 a furnace was again in blast, but was blown out again a year later at a time of trade depression. The new owners went into liquidation in 1876 and the works closed in 1877. Vickerman, the main creditor, was able to buy the works back at a modest price. In 1888-9 the plant was dismantled and sold, but the buildings remained in workshop or storage use.
In the 1872 inventory "mine and limekilns" are described: there were two oval kilns of 3 to 6 m diameter and three circular kilns, located close to the top of the furnaces. The arrangements for calcining and, if required, lime burning, probably changed frequently. The reference to limekilns suggests that at Kilgetty the unusual, but not unknown, practice of using quicklime as some or all of the fluxing material may have been attempted.
At Kilgetty the ore used was the local argillaceous ore. Haematite is also found locally, and deposits of it are described in the inventory, although it appears to have been virtually untried. The inventory also indicates that the fuel used at one time, perhaps originally, was so-called "anthracite coke", a mixture of small anthracite with bituminous slack. The inventory refers to 29 coke ovens in three blocks in use in 1872.
In 1888, not long after closure of the ironworks, the Ordnance Survey shows two large oval kilns opposite to the furnaces and single small kiln in a detached position to the N. On the 1906 edition "limekilns" are shown and noted, and are probably still in use. However, they appear to be two circular and two oval kilns, whereas the present set consists of six similar circular kilns. It appears therefore the surviving kilns are a post-1906 rebuild, exploiting the convenient location with railway sidings at high and low levels.
The single oval kiln in isolation to the N shown in 1888 remains. This was probably a scotch kiln for calcining ore.