Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
85456
Building Number
 
Grade
II*  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
20/10/2005  
Date of Amendment
20/10/2005  
Name of Property
Fenn's Moss Peat Processing Works  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Wrexham  
Community
Bronington  
Town
 
Locality
Fenn's Moss  
Easting
347807  
Northing
336656  
Street Side
 
Location
An isolated building on the S side of a former railway, approximately 2.2km NE of Bettisfield.  

Description


Broad Class
 
Period
 

History
Peat has a long history of exploitation on Fenns and Whixall Mosses, but its industrial exploitation began only in the late C19, and peaked after the middle of the C20 when it was used as a garden fertiliser. Fenns Moss Peat Processing Works was built in 1938 by the Midland Moss Litter Company, replacing an earlier works destroyed by fire. The company processed 3000 tons of peat in 1954 but went into liquidation in 1962, when the works was taken over by L.S. Beckett. The works ceased operation in the early 1970s. In the works, peat blocks were crushed or hammered, and the peat passed via elevators through rotary screens to be pressed into bales. Output included 'dust' and 'throughs', both forms of fine granulated dry peat use in packing and in cattle feed, and 'litter' and 'tailings', forms of coarse/medium granulated dry peat used for livestock bedding and deep-litter poultry systems.  

Exterior
A steel-framed shed with lightly trussed steel roof of 9 bays. Originally clad and roofed in corrugated iron, it was entirely stripped of external covering at the time of inspection. The floor of the building is raised above surrounding ground level. On the N side, facing the former tramway, are 3 sliding steel doors. On the S side are steel steps to a single central former door. To the L of the S doorway is an outshut. A lean-to engine house against the W gable end is clad in modern corrugated galvanised metal. On its W side is a steel platform retaining 3 cast iron 1000-gallon tanks bearing the legend 'Corporation Transport', 2 of which held water and the 3rd (and a 4th removed when the works closed) held fuel.  

Interior
The works retains most of its original machinery, which was belt driven from a National heavy-oil engine, which remains in situ. Surviving machinery comprises a hammer mill and a crusher, elevators, a rotary screen, and 3 balers, 2 by Webster & Bickerton, and one by Shirtliffe.  

Reason for designation
Listed grade II* as an exceptionally rare surviving peat processing works, retaining its original machinery and within a well-preserved historic landscape. Scheduled Ancient Monument FL182.  

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





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