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Waterloo Pottery Kiln

On the site off Blackamoor Road at Swinton there are the remains of the once great Rockingham Pottery which operated in the 18th and 19th centuries. The gatehouse and the painting rooms are now private houses but you can visit the Waterloo Kiln and the Pottery Ponds.

The kiln was built in 1815 so it was called after the British victory at the Battle of Waterloo. The Kiln was a firing chamber or oven which funneled air through and out of the chimney. After the pottery closed in the 1840s the kiln was converted into a residence and a door windows installed. Between about 1900 and 1930 it was used as a smallpox isolation hospital. Then it became a residence again. In 2011 the ponds looked as if they had been fettled but the kiln still looks as if it needs something done to it.

The Waterloo Kiln
The Waterloo Kiln
Pottery Ponds
Pottery Ponds

There is a small car park off Blackamoor Road.

More about Rockingham Pottery onsite at History - Trade & Industry - Potteries - Rockingham Pottery.

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