Cairn's Mill

Last updated

Cairn's Mill
Scottish Borders UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Cairn's Mill
Location within the Scottish Borders
OS grid reference NT7849
Civil parish
  • Fogo
Council area
Lieutenancy area
Country Scotland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Duns
Postcode district TD11
Dialling code 01360
Police Scotland
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°44′21″N2°20′23″W / 55.7391°N 2.3398°W / 55.7391; -2.3398
Cairn's Mill - mill, cottage, and steadings - seen from Fogo road in autumn 1959 Cairn's Mill - mill, cottage, and steadings - seen from Fogo road in autumn 1959 - Bogend farmstead at distant right.jpg
Cairn's Mill - mill, cottage, and steadings - seen from Fogo road in autumn 1959

Cairn's Mill [1] consists of a group of buildings [2] close to the Blackadder Water in the parish of Fogo, county of Berwickshire, Borders of Scotland. The presence of a mill at this site is indicated on a map from 1654 [3] , which covers the historic region within the Scottish Borders known as the Merse.

Contents

All buildings within this settlement are registered as Category C listed buildings [4] , which includes both the cottage and the steadings on the hillside and the mill down in the Blackadder Water valley, adjacent to the mill race. All these buildings were erected between the late 18th and mid 19th century, with some later additions. According to the oldest inhabitant's memories the mill was still in use in the late 1960s. The only access route is via a single-track road, which to the west leads to the village of Fogo, just over a mile away, and to the east roughly half a mile to Bogend Farm.

Description

Cairn's Mill cottage

Cairn's Mill cottage resides on the hillside about 6 metres north of the steadings, the garden behind sloping towards the mill below. The original, much smaller cottage may date back to the 18th century. Most additions and alterations had occurred by the mid 19th century, some more in the following decades. The current cottage is L-shaped, with the older section to the east, to which a wider western section was later added. A gabled porch serves as the main entrance, the initial structure's door serves as side entrance. [4] [5]

Cairn's Mill steadings

The Cairn's Mill steadings are laid out in a rectangular form. The oldest parts probably date back to the 18th century. Three sections (west, north, east) connect to form a courtyard open to the south. A description from the year 1998 mentions a rubble wall enclosing the southern end of the courtyard. [4]

Cairn's Mill

The original Cairn's Mill cornmill, later in use as a sawmill, was erected before 1654 in the valley of the Blackadder Water, beside the mill race (mill lade on Ordnance Survey maps for Scotland). No date is given for the current two-storeyed building, but the existing documentation suggests that it is of similar age as the hillside buildings. The walls are constructed of rubble masonry; roofing material is mostly corrugated iron except for the slate-covered kiln to the north. All original machinery has been removed from the interior of the mill. At some date a sawmill was attached and the corrugated iron roofing of the eastern side of the building was correspondingly extended. [4] [5]

History

Detail extracted from the original map of the Merse by Joan Blaeu, printed 1654. Cairn's Mill is situated at the first water wheel symbol downriver from Fogo K(irk), close to the lower edge of this image >> Click here to refer to map with annotations which indicate various locations, including the modern names of all mills situated on the Blackadder Water and its tributaries. Joan Blaeu - Merse - 1654 - Area 'Duns Grinnla Fogo'.png
Detail extracted from the original map of the Merse by Joan Blaeu, printed 1654. Cairn's Mill is situated at the first water wheel symbol downriver from Fogo K(irk), close to the lower edge of this image >> Click here to refer to map with annotations which indicate various locations, including the modern names of all mills situated on the Blackadder Water and its tributaries.

The site Cairn's Mill first appears as a water wheel symbol on Joan Blaeu's map of the Merse. It is one of a whole series of mills spaced along the Blackadder river. [3] Thus the mill must have been in regular use before the area was initially surveyed and well before the map was printed in 1654.

Alterations and extensions of the buildings may be traced since 1771. The most significant alterations are the enlargement of the hillside cottage, the continual development of the steadings, and the addition of a cottage (now demolished) in the valley at the foot of the downhill track leading to the mill.

Four owners of Cairn's Mill are documented:

Maps of Cairn's Mill

The following links lead to maps with annotations that display various stages of the development of Cairn's Mill and surroundings:

Note: images of the mill are not in the public domain, but are available at one of these external links.

Nearby places

Other places nearby include Fogo, Gavinton, the Greenknowe Tower, Greenlaw, Duns, Polwarth.

See also

References

  1. "Cairn's Mill". The Berwickshire Place-Name Resource, University of Glasgow. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  2. Historic Environment Scotland. "CAIRN'S MILL COTTAGE INCLUDING MILL STEADING AND CAIRN'S MILL (Category C Listed Building LB45764)" . Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  3. 1 2 , Joan Blaeu, Timothy Pont (1654). "Marcia (Merse)". NLS.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 , "CAIRN'S MILL COTTAGE INCLUDING MILL STEADING AND CAIRN'S MILL, LB45764". Historicenvironment.scot. 15 October 1998. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  5. 1 2 "Fogo, Cairn's Mill - Architecture Notes". Trove.scot. 15 October 1998. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  6. "The property of D. M. Robertson Esq. situate(d) in the parishes of Ladykirk, Fogo, Gordon, Eccles & Swinton in the County of Berwick, surveyed in the years 1830 and 1840 - refer to cartouche at top right". NLS.uk. 1840. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
  7. 1 2 "Statement of Special Interest: previous owners Richard Trotter esq. and George Sanderson". Historicenvironment.scot. 1866. Retrieved 18 December 2025.