Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
24458
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
12/12/2000  
Date of Amendment
12/12/2000  
Name of Property
Pearl Engine House  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Isle of Anglesey  
Community
Amlwch  
Town
Amlwch  
Locality
Parys Mountain  
Easting
244761  
Northing
390775  
Street Side
SW  
Location
Located in a prominent position on the extreme north-east side of Parys Mountain. Accessed via a minor road leading W off the A5025.  

Description


Broad Class
Industrial  
Period
 

History
The Pearl Shaft Engine House was constructed in the early C19 for the Mona Mine, to house an 18" Cornish Beam Engine, which was used for pumping water up the 600'(182.9m) deep Pearl shaft. The design is based on a Cornish engine house. The engine was in operation by 1819, when it was visited and described by the physicist Michael Faraday. The water in the shaft sump was lifted a short distance to a cistern by lift pump, from where a force pump pushed it up the shaft to another cistern, where the process was repeated. The Engine House fell into disuse when the mine ceased operating in 1904, was stripped of machinery and steadily became derelict. In 1992 the Welsh Mines Preservation Trust was formed and one of its first objectives was to promote the importance of the engine house as an industrial building and to raise funds and support to save the building from further collapse. In 1993 permission to proceed was granted by the landowner, the Marquis of Anglesey and consolidation work was carried out in mid to late 1990s. Copper ore had been extracted from Parys Mountain from the Bronze Age onwards, although operations before the late C18 were small-scale and piecemeal. In 1768 a rich deposit of copper ore was discovered, and the two opencast mines of Parys and Mona became the largest producers of copper in the world, with over 3000 tons(3048 tonnes) of copper produced annually between 1773 and 1785. Production levels had peaked by 1800, after which time production fluctuated. The underground workings were expanded after 1811, under the direction of Cornish mine captains. There was a brief boom in the early 1830s, but by the end of the century less than 500 tons(508 tonnes) was being raised annually. By 1904 the mines had closed, due to the competition from cheaper copper imported from America and Africa. The total production of copper from the area during the period between 1768 and 1904 has been estimated at 3.5 million tons(3.6 million tonnes) of ore, from which 130,000 tons(132,080 tonnes) of copper metal was recovered.  

Exterior
Engine house, roughly square in plan, with a gabled roof. Formerly attached to the N side was a larger, rectangular, boiler house with chimney (now demolished); to the S is the Pearl Shaft (now capped), and to the SW is the area of the capstan pit and rope channel. Rubble walls, generally 0.6m thick, although the bob wall to the S, which supported the engine beam, is 1.2m thick below the point where the beam fulcrum is located. The roof was formerly slated. Ground floor openings to each elevation with replaced timber lintels; Tall brick arched opening set high in the S elevation for bob mount.  

Interior
The N half of the floor contains the mountings for the engine cylinder, the cylinder block. The S part of the floor holds the cataract pit, which is about 2m lower than the cylinder block level.  

Reason for designation
Included, notwithstanding condition, as an early C19 engine house which formed an important component of the industrial copper mining complex at Parys Mountain, at one time the greatest producer of copper in the world. The engine house forms a prominent feature within the landscape, is a rare survivor of its type and unique on Anglesey.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





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