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Littleton gunpowder works
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    Littleton gunpowder works

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    Littleton gunpowder works
    Winford powdermill.JPG
    Location Winford, Somerset, England
    Coordinates 51°22′37″N 2°38′54″W / 51.37694°N 2.64833°W / 51.37694; -2.64833Coordinates: 51°22′37″N 2°38′54″W / 51.37694°N 2.64833°W / 51.37694; -2.64833
    Built c. 1650
    Official name Littleton gunpowder works at Powdermill Farm
    Designated 17 May 2000
    Reference no. 1019452
    Listed Building – Grade II*
    Official name Powdermill Farmhouse
    Designated 18 September 1980
    Reference no. 1158132
    Listed Building – Grade II*
    Official name Barn to southwest of Powerdermill Farmhouse
    Designated 18 September 1980
    Reference no. 1158144
    Listed Building – Grade II
    Official name Powder Mill Cottage
    Designated 13 December 2001
    Reference no. 1389623
    Listed Building – Grade II
    Official name Clock Tower approximately 300 Metres north west of Powerdermill Cottage
    Designated 19 January 1987
    Reference no. 1129216
    Littleton gunpowder works is located in Somerset
    Littleton gunpowder works
    Location of Littleton gunpowder works in Somerset

    Littleton gunpowder works between Winford and Chew Magna in the English county of Somerset, started gunpowder production around 1650 and continued until approximately 1820. It is a listed as a scheduled monument.

    The powder mill opened around 1740 following the expansion of the port in Bristol and increased availability of saltpetre from India. The mill was controlled by merchants based in the city and supplied gunpowder to ships sailing from the port. A previous warehouse, on the site where Bristol Temple Meads railway station now stands was considered too dangerous in the city. Despite a fire in 1755 the Littleton works expanded to become the largest gunpowder producing works in South West England by the middle of the 18th century. There was some association with another gunpowder mill at Woolley near Bath and the purchase and conversion of a snuff mill at nearby Stanton Drew was considered. It closed in the 1820s after the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

    It was powered by an overshot water wheel on Winford Brook a tributary of the River Chew.

    Some of the buildings remain intact, while others are ruined. The farmhouse was built in the mid 16th century but has been added to and revised in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. It is a Grade II* listed building, as is the 17th century barn. Powder Mill Cottage was built in the 18th century as the cooperage for the powder mill. The clock tower which was part of the works was originally attached to a chapel or office.


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