Warminster Maltings: Difference between revisions

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Warminster Maltings Ltd
<big>'''Warminster Maltings Ltd''', ''39 Pound Street, Warminster, Wiltshire BA12 8NN''</big>
39 Pound Street
 
Warminster
18c, altered and rebuilt in 1879 for the Morgan family of Maltsters in typical local materials. Pound Street Malthouse was owned by the firm Morgan/Beaven. The malthouse is reputed to be 18c but it was substantially remodelled in 1879 when under the direction of E S Beaven, nicknamed 'Barley Beaven', it became an academy of barley breeding and malting until 1941. Beaven began working for W F Morgan at Pound Street in 1878 and was responsible for kiln developments and barley breeding, for which he won a number of awards. His outstanding achievements in barley breeding earned him an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University. His most notable barley was the Plumage Archer which was introduced to British farmers in 1905 and became the mainstay of UK malting barley production for the next fifty years. Pound Street Malthouse retains Beaven's patented brick steeps and kilns. (Information from Historic England)
Wiltshire
 
BA12 8NN
From the Warminster Maltings web site:
 
''Situated in the Wiltshire town of the same name, on the western tip of Salisbury Plain, the Pound Street maltings has been continuously making malt for the brewing industry since 1855. Not only that, in defiance of all the 20th century technology which completely overwhelmed the malting industry in the 1960’s, Warminster Malt is still made the traditional way, by hand, on floors, almost totally unchanged from the day the maltings was originally commissioned.''
 
 
* Article: '''[http://www.breweryhistory.com/journal/archive/169/Warminster.pdf "Warminster Maltings, Pound Street, Warminster" by Sandra Bates]'''
* The Brewery History Society visited the site in July 2023. For more images of Warminster Maltings, see: [[Wadworths BHS AGM 20 July 2023]]
* Pound Street Maltings is a Grade II* (2-star) listed building. Details on the Historic England web page: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1036240?section=official-list-entry
 
 
'''Images of Warminster Maltings'''
 
<gallery>
File:WarminsterMaltings19_SP_Aug2017.jpg|August 2017
File:WarminsterMaltings20_SP_Aug2017.jpg|August 2017
File:WarminsterMaltings21_SP_Aug2017.jpg|August 2017
File:WarminsterMaltings22_SP_Aug2017.jpg|August 2017
File:WarminsterMaltings23_SP_Aug2017.jpg|August 2017
File:WarminsterMaltings2023aa_SP_July23.jpg|July 2023
File:WarminsterMaltings2023bb_SP_July23.jpg|July 2023
</gallery>
 
 
 
 
[[Category:Maltings]]
[[Category:Wiltshire]]

Latest revision as of 17:11, 27 August 2023

Warminster Maltings Ltd, 39 Pound Street, Warminster, Wiltshire BA12 8NN

18c, altered and rebuilt in 1879 for the Morgan family of Maltsters in typical local materials. Pound Street Malthouse was owned by the firm Morgan/Beaven. The malthouse is reputed to be 18c but it was substantially remodelled in 1879 when under the direction of E S Beaven, nicknamed 'Barley Beaven', it became an academy of barley breeding and malting until 1941. Beaven began working for W F Morgan at Pound Street in 1878 and was responsible for kiln developments and barley breeding, for which he won a number of awards. His outstanding achievements in barley breeding earned him an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University. His most notable barley was the Plumage Archer which was introduced to British farmers in 1905 and became the mainstay of UK malting barley production for the next fifty years. Pound Street Malthouse retains Beaven's patented brick steeps and kilns. (Information from Historic England)

From the Warminster Maltings web site:

Situated in the Wiltshire town of the same name, on the western tip of Salisbury Plain, the Pound Street maltings has been continuously making malt for the brewing industry since 1855. Not only that, in defiance of all the 20th century technology which completely overwhelmed the malting industry in the 1960’s, Warminster Malt is still made the traditional way, by hand, on floors, almost totally unchanged from the day the maltings was originally commissioned.



Images of Warminster Maltings