Windmills in the Isle of Man

[2] In 2007, it was proposed to add the mill to the Isle of Man's Protected Buildings Register.

[1] It is 2.35 metres (7 ft 9 in) in diameter at the base and was house converted between 1967 and 1972.

It was house converted in the 1990s, with a glass roof being built within the tower.

[7] The mill at Jurby was mentioned in the will of Captain Thomas Christian in 1725.

[1] SC 490 913 54°17′42″N 4°19′19″W / 54.295°N 4.322°W / 54.295; -4.322 (Baldromma) The small tower threshing mill at Maughold was built c.1881.

[2] SC 269 702 54°05′53″N 4°38′56″W / 54.098°N 4.649°W / 54.098; -4.649 (Billown Quarry) This was a large iron windpump.

[2] SC 270 768 54°09′29″N 4°39′04″W / 54.158°N 4.651°W / 54.158; -4.651 (South Barrule) This small tower mill was built c.1902 to work an incline on a 2 ft (610 mm) gauge railway serving the slate quarry on South Barrule, Malew.

[8] The mill at Bootleyvelt, Maughold, was apparently built in a tall tree.

The tower was 35 feet (10.67 m) diameter at the base and 64 feet (19.51 m) high[1] The six storey tower was reduced to a two-storey base in the 1960s and the mill is now a house conversion.

Mullen Guiye
Castletown
Maughold
South Barrule