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Latitude: 55.9735 / 55°58'24"N
Longitude: -2.8922 / 2°53'31"W
OS Eastings: 344416
OS Northings: 675966
OS Grid: NT444759
Mapcode National: GBR 2M.WQ5Y
Mapcode Global: WH7TW.J4Z0
Plus Code: 9C7VX4F5+94
Entry Name: Threshing Barn And Granary, Mill, Longniddry Farm, Longniddry
Listing Name: Longniddry Farm Steading
Listing Date: 27 January 1993
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 346176
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB13160
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Longniddry, Longniddry Farm, Mill, Threshing Barn And Granary
ID on this website: 200346176
Location: Gladsmuir
County: East Lothian
Electoral Ward: Preston, Seton and Gosford
Parish: Gladsmuir
Traditional County: East Lothian
Tagged with: Granary Grain mill
Late 18th century, with mid 19th century additions. Large e-plan steading, with mill and sluice to centre; farmhouse, stables, cartshed and granary to W, cattle courts to E. Random rubble with droved or stugged ashlar dressings.
STABLES: single storey range aligned N-S; doorways with windows to left, some enlarged openings with wooden sliding doors.
CARTSHED AND GRANARY: 2-storey, 6-bay, free-standing; 5 segmental arches at ground and door to outer right. 6 openings at 1st floor; 2 doorways at centre flanked by 2 windows, 1/2 glazed and louvred. Stone forestair to S gable to 1st floor, breaking eaves in piend roof.
MILL, THRESHING BARN AND GRANARY: late 18th century with 1850s additions; overshot waterwheel circa 1850 housed below ground level in 2-storey mill; doorway to S lintel inscribed 1850. Threshing barn to S, 2-storey range to E with granary at 1st floor. Grey slates to Mill and Threshing barn.
SLUICE AND MILL LADE: lade entering rubble-walled garden to S over sluice, to mill under segmentally arched bridge carrying roadway.
CATTLE COURTS* TO E of Mill, entered by depresssed arch-gabled pend. 4 piend roofed cattle courts to W terminating in gabled range with low interconnecting arches, cast-iron columns, stone feeding troughs, timber hay-hecks. Red pantiles, some corrugated iron, ashlar coped skews.
Plans illustrate agricultural improvement in Longniddry instigated by the Wemyss Estate, with the building of the mill, lade and sluice between 1778 and 1798 replacing smallholdings on the site. Low arches within cattle courts similar to those at Beanston Farm. Prestonhill; also part of the Wemyss Estate, mid-late 18th century.
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