Records Of E.S. Beaven (1857-1941), Barley Breeder Of Boreham Road, Warminster, Gifted To Museum Of English Rural Life, Reading

March 1998

RECORDS OF E S BEAVEN (1857-1941)
Accession no: DX451
Catalogue mark: D BEAV
(See also TR GUI)

Introduction
Edwin Sloper Beaven (1857-1941) was one of the leading breeders of barley in the first half of the twentieth century. He was born near Heytesbury in Wiltshire and began working on his father’s farm there at the age of 13. Later Beaven became a maltster in Warminster, Wiltshire, and became interested in the quality of malting barley. In 1894 he purchased 4 acres of land at Boreham just outside Warminster and began to carry out experimental trials of barley. One outcome of his experiments was a new variety, Plumage-Archer, which was one of the principal types of malting barely until new hybrids, such as Proctor, were introduced after the Second World War. Beaven was associated with the brewers Arthur Guinness, Son & Co who took over his maltings and trial grounds after his death in 1941. Much of Beaven’s work was published posthumously in the book Barley (1947).

These records include some relating to work carried out by Beaven’s executors and trustees for the period 1942-1945.

Records deposited in January 1998 as a gift by John R. Young & Susan E. Oldham.

List compiled March 1998

Record Types
A1-5 Biographical and Personal
B1-3 Correspondence
C1-40 Research Material
D1-11 Reference Material
E1-15 Published Work
G1 Copy of Address

A BIOGRAPHICAL AND PERSONAL INFORMATION

A1 OBITUARY of E S Beaven in the twenty-second Report of the National Institute of Agricultural Botany. 1941.

A2 OBITUARY of E S Beaven by Herbert Hunter and published in the journal Nature (27 Dec). 1941.

A3 OBITUARY of E S Beaven reprinted from Journal of the Institute of Brewing. 1942. [2 copies].

A4 EXTRACT (hand-written) from Farmer & Stockbreeder which mentions Beaven and his pre-war tour of Herefordshire with Sir Daniel Hall and Prof. T B Wood. 1943.

A5 REPRINT of Herbert Hunter’s obituary of E S Beaven in The Journal of the National Institute of Agricultural Botany. 1944.

B CORRESPONDENCE

B1 CORRESPONDENCE between E S Beaven and the Board of Agriculture and fisheries. 1903-1916.

B2 CORRESPONDENCE between E S Beaven and W S Gosset. 1908-1914.

B3 CORRESPONDENCE relating to the sale and distribution of barley. 1911-1914.

C RESEARCH MATERIAL

C1-4 ANALYSES Experiments on Warminster Nursery barley crops
1 1907.
2 1909.
3 1910-11.
4 1912.

C5 FILE Analysis of Correlation, Biometrics, factors of production and “Chessboards”. c1912-c1934.

C6-31 ANALYSES BOOKS Experiments on Boreham Road barley crops carried out by E S Beaven
6 (unbound) 1913.
7 1914.
8 1915.
9 (unbound) 1916.
10 1919.
11 1920.
12 1921.
13 1922.
14 1923.
15 1924.
16 1925.
17 1926.
18 1927.
19 1928.
20 1929.
21 1930.
22 1931.
23 1932.
24 1933.
25 1934.
26 1935.
27 1936.
28 1937.
29 1938.
30 1939.
31 1940.

C32 ANALYSIS BOOK Boreham Road barley crops (including “Nitrogen Determinations”). 1919-1921.

C33-35 ANALYSES BOOKS Experiments on Boreham Road barley crop carried out by the executors and trustees of E S Beaven
33 1942.
34 1943.
35 1944-45.

C36 PLAN of Boreham Road field plots. 1938

C37 ANALYSIS BOOK Crop weight and migration. 1919

C38 ANALYSIS BOOK Effect of clipping field plots. 1921

C39 ANALYSIS BOOK Warminster field plots. 1921

C40 ANALYSIS of different varieties of barley. nd.

D REFERENCE MATERIAL

D1 REPORT of the Select Committee on Corn Averages. 1888.

D2 REPORT of the Select Committee on Corn Sales. 1891.

D3 REPORT of the Committee on Scottish Agricultural Prices 1901.

D4 PAMPHLET An Attempt to Find a Basis for the Improvement of the Barley Crop by R H Biffen. 1906.

D5 PAMPHLET On Testing Varieties of Cereals by “Student”. 1923.

D6 PAMPHLET Visit to Dr Beaven’s Barley Nursery and Field Plots at Warminster. 1930.

D7 FILE of articles by H M Lancaster entitled “The Maltster’s Materials and Methods” published in The Brewing Trade Review. 1933-1935.

D8 PAMPHLET Co-operation in Large-Scale Experiments. 1936.

D9 PAMPHLET Agricultural Research and the Work of the Agricultural Research Council by Sir William Dampier. 1938.

D10 PAMPHLET Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries “Growmore” Leaflet No 18 Cereal Varieties for Spring Sowing : with particular reference to Wales and the West Country. 1940.

D11 TYPESCRIPT Discussion on “Plot Technique”. nd.

E PUBLISHED WORK

E1 PAMPHLET Various Conditions Affecting the Malting Quality of Barley by John M H Munro & E S Beaven. 1900.

E2 PAMPHLET Fuel Consumption in Malt Kilns. 1904.

E3 PAMPHLET The Quality and Yield of English Malting Barley. 1905. [3 copies].

E4 PAMPHLET Pedigree Seed Corn. 1910.

E5 PAMPHLET Varieties of Barley. 1914.

E6 PAMPHLET Breeding Cereals for Increased Production, 1920. [4 copies].

E7 PAMPHLET Trials of New Varieties of Work. 1922.

E8 PAMPHLET “Beaven’s 1924” Plumage-Archer Barley. 1924.

E9 PAMPHLET Interpretations of Results of Field Trials. 1927. [3 copies].

E10 PAMPHLET A Physiological Study of Varietal Differences in Plants (Part I) by F G Gregory & Frank Crowther with an appendix by E S Beaven. 1928.

E11 LEAFLET Review of the Policy of the Institute (Institute of Brewing), 1929.

E12 PAMPHLET Boreham Road, Warminster; Barley Nursery and Field Plots, 1930 : Guide to the Various Cultures. 1930.

E13 PAMPHLET The Culture of Barley for Brewing. 1934.

E14 PAMPHLET Barley for Brewing Since 1886. 1936.

E15 PAMPHLET Boreham Road, Warminster; Barley Nursery and Field Plots. 1936.

G OTHER RECORDS

G1 ADDRESS Pure Races of Barley given by E S Beaven at the South Wilts Chamber of Agriculture. 1914. [2 copies]

Associated Material
Books in Rural History Centre Library by E S Beaven.
Barley : Fifty Years of Observation and Experiment (1947).

Warminster And Malt, 1994

Notes by Hugh Turner and Danny Howell

Warminster has a long association with the brewing of beer and the manufacture of its primary raw material, malt. During the 18th and early 19th centuries the importance of Warminster as a corn market attracted customers to drink the local brews and provided local barley from which to make the malt, the town being situated in a cereal growing area.

During this period there were many (allegedly as many as sixty) working malthouses in the town. Even during the declining years of Warminster’s industrial history, in the second half of the 19th century, a Mr. John Warren, himself a maltster, remarked on the twelve malthouses with an ‘average steeping power of sixteen quarters’ (one quarter of barley = 4 cwt) operating and thriving in the town.

So what is this product called malt, which held for so long such an important place in employment and prosperity for the area? The art of malting has been in existence since the time of the ancient Egyptians, with cereals, mainly barley, being grown so that their large complex molecules of starch, cellulose and protein can be broken down during malting to smaller molecules which can be assimilated by yeast during the brewing process. The malting process itself begins with the maltster buying the most suitable variety and quality of barley for his purpose. Then all the barley is dried to an average of around 12% moisture content, to provide safe storage against insects and to prevent hot/damp patches in the heaps or bins. Drying also helps to break any possible natural dormancy which may reduce the grain’s suitability for malting and standardise the condition of each batch of barley.

Next comes the steeping or immersing in water of the barley (at Pound Street Maltings approximately 10 tonnes per day). The maltster decides on a suitable programme of water immersion, which usually involves three periods when it is under water and three draining or ‘resting’ periods, during a total of about 72 hours. Control of the water temperature is critical and the Pound Street well (giving about two thirds of the total water required) provides water at a constant 52 degrees Fahrenheit throughout the year, which is ideal for ‘steeping’. At the conclusion of the steeping cycle, the barley should have taken up about 45% by weight of water.

During the 19th century, excise duty was levied upon malt rather than beer, so that customs officers visited maltings and carried out a volumetric measurement of the wet barley from the steep and the malt floors.

Stories are told of maltsters keeping the water uptake of barley to a minimum in steep, until the customs officer had left the building and then pouring water onto the heaps! It is interesting to note that there is still evidence of this bygone age in the inscription visible over one of the doors at the front of the Pound Street malthouse, reading “William Frank Morgan, licensed maltster”.

Barley from the steep tank is ‘caste’ or discharged onto the malting floors, where in the past it sometimes remained for as long as eight or nine days, slowly germinating. Nowadays, however, four day flooring is more normal with ‘superior varieties’ of barley, and improved malting techniques.

Once on the malt floor, the wet grain begins to grow and by the fourth day has small, white curly roots showing. In order that barley may grow evenly and without too much rootlet growth or respiration loss, the ‘pieces’ of barley are ‘dragged’ (in some areas called ‘ploughed’) by a traditional wooden-handled three-pronged implement being pulled through it by one man, giving a wave-like appearance to the germinating grain. Traditionally in the past the barley also had to be ‘turned’ with a wooden tyned fork, but this has now been succeeded by the ‘Robinson floor turner’ which has electrically driven mower-type blades and is slowly pulled through the malt by a ‘floorman’. Temperatures in the germinating barley increase naturally during ‘flooring’ from about 60 degrees Fahrenheit to 70 degrees Fahrenheit. When the breakdown of the large molecules in the barley corns is completed to the maltster’s satisfaction, the green malt, as the growing barley is called at that stage, is loaded into a kiln where its moisture content is reduced to about 4% by application of high air flows and controlled heat.

The heat source in the past was first from timber and then coal mined in Somerset. In more recent times anthracite has been purchased as ‘arsenic free’, from particular collieries in South Wales. Originally, coal was delivered on pack horse, mules or carriers carts from Somerset, with loads of malt being taken back for Somerset and Devon brewers. Now, however, one looks to oil and natural gas, as cheaper sources of energy and for better control of kilning.

Kilning of malt has several purposes, firstly the purely practical ones of reducing the weight of the product for transportation and to achieve safe storage. It also temporarily arrests the action of the enzymes which break down the starch molecules and therefore ensures that there is no waste of the carbohydrates required by the brewer for his yeast. The colour and flavour of the malt can be adjusted at the kilning stage to suit various customer requirements.

A basic malt kiln in most malthouses over the past two hundred years has combined a recognisable pyramid (normally slate tiles) with a space at the top to allow steam to escape and a flat cover of tin or steel on four legs, over the outlet. The ‘drying’ chamber would have a tiled floor, the tiles about one foot square and one and a half inches thick, with many little ‘roses’ of holes, for the air to pass through.

Green malt would be loaded to a depth overall of about 7 to 8 inches and ‘turned’ at least twice a day with firstly wooden tyne forks and then as it dried, wooden shovels. The whole drying process would probably take about 72 hours or more, relying originally on pure convection draughts and later a fan mounted at the top of the pyramid to suck out the steam. Under the tiles would be a large room in which a ‘spreader’, being a metal square or disc, suspended over the furnace to equalise distribution of the hot air. The furnace itself would be of brick and so designed to give maximum control and maximum draught. The art of ‘firing’ a malt kiln in the days of coal fires depended on the skill and experience of the fireman in producing the right amount of heat – not too much to spoil the malt, not too little so as to produce inadequate drying.

The replacement kiln at Pound Street Maltings was designed to dry a batch of green malt loaded to about two and a half feet deep in approximately 22 hours, without requiring any manual ‘turning’ or attention. The principle is to provide a sufficiently strong fan beneath the kiln to force air up through the malt in conjunction with a well controlled heat source (oil or gas). The kiln is constructed with a flat, pre-caste concrete roof drying chamber with wedge wire floor, beneath which is a pressure chamber where the air pressure builds up under the ‘bed’ of malt. This chamber contains a circular, slightly conical spreader for even flow of air. Below the pressure chamber is the furnace, the fan and its ducting.

Once dried the malt is put through a screening process, whereby the dried rootlets are removed from the corns and any small corns and dust are also removed. The oldest piece of equipment used at Warminster’s Pound Street Maltings, the ‘Malt Screen’, consisted of a rotating barrel of four wire drum sections with metal paddles inside. This machine was manufactured by Messrs. Robert Boby of Bury St. Edmunds and supplied to Bailey’s Maltings of Warminster on 13th January 1887. It was purchased by E. S. Beaven and installed in the Pound Street Maltings in 1890.

A working day in the maltings begins at 7 a.m. with the five man labour force (one man each day is on ‘day off’) ‘dragging’ the germinating barley, then shovelling the malt from the kiln, which has been dried during the previous 24 hours. One man then begins to ‘caste’ wet barley from the steep tank and the others commence loading the next batch of green malt into the kiln.

The foreman is responsible for weighing the ‘malt culms’ (dried rootlets) from the malt screen and supervising the weighing of the bulk dried malt being ‘run up’ into a hopper for outloading to the Guinness brewery in London.

Two men finish the casting of the wet grain from the steep tank and this batch of material is then spread evenly over the top and bottom malting floors by use of a ‘power shovel’, to a depth of about 4 inches. A power shovel consists of an electrically driven winch, with a 40 metre haulage cable (a 12 volt inner core operating the control switch) coupled to a 6 foot board, handles and two wheels. This tool is also used when discharging the green malt from the floors, before kilning.

The remainder of the day, up to 4 p.m., is occupied with ensuring that sufficient barley is available over the steeping tanks, the germinating barley is adequately dragged and turned, malt is outloaded to bulk lorries, by-products (malt culins, barley screenings, kiln dust (rootlets from under the kiln) and malt/barley dust (from aspiration) are weighed, ‘bagged-up’ and outloaded. All the by-products are sold to various compounders or local farmers for use as part of a mixed cattle food.

During each evening, one man returns to the maltings to ‘drag’ any germinating barley that needs attention.

Due to the higher ambient temperatures during June to September, it is very difficult to control the growth of the germinating barley so the production of good quality malt in traditional maltings without air conditioning is impossible. Malt is therefore manufactured from October to May inclusive and June and early July are a period for holidays and maintenance. As soon as the harvest begins, usually early August and throughout September, sufficient barley is purchased, dried and stored to meet malt sales during the following year.

Until the last war, it was normal for workers in the maltings to be laid off at the end of each malting season and to find work on farms or with timber companies and builders for the summer months. They then had to re-apply for their jobs in the following October, with no certainty that they would be employed, particularly as was the case during the depression of the 1930s.

In the years prior to 1961, ten men were employed in the Pound Street Maltings. Two were used purely as ‘barley men’ in drying, storing, ‘bagging off’ (as all barley at this time was in 2 cwt hessian sacks) and tipping bags to ensure constant supplies to the steeping tanks. There was one man who worked only at night to attend the growing barley and carry out such duties as required. The foreman and deputy supervised the day to day operations.

Following partial mechanisation in 1961, the workforce was reduced to 6 men. The ‘nightman’ was dispensed with and the germinating barley was processed by ‘dragging’ on overtime in the late evening.

One of the significant changes to affect working arrangements in the maltings was the advent of ‘bulk handling’. Traditionally both malt and barley had been transported and stored in hessian sacks. At the Pound Street Maltings in October 1958, malt was for the first tirne dispatched by specially constructed bulk lorries (Bartrum’s Road Services) to the brewery in London.

Prior to that date, sacks of malt were driven to the Warminster Railway Station on flat-bed lorries and off-loaded to railway trucks for onward transmission to the Park Royal Brewery.

The farming community resisted change to bulk handling, for more than another decade, but by 1974 virtually all barley was being delivered to the Maltings and the store at Codford in bulk lorries. The large sack hire industry which had grown up around the needs of agriculture, has in consequence nearly disappeared.

The malting company operating from Pound Street Maltings, with the office and laboratory at 43 East Street, Wanninster and barley drying/storage at Codford, E. S Beaven Ltd., operated as a wholly owned subsidiary company of the brewers Guinness. The late Dr E. S. Beaven, besides being a maltster, was an internationally famous barley breeder.

Edwin Sloper Beaven (1857 – 1941) joined the local brewing/malting company of William Frank Morgan in 1876 and married the owner’s sister, Miss Margaret Morgan in 1881. He later acquired the business with several local maltings, including Pound Street and Market Place at Warminster and Montpelier, Bristol. In these premises Dr Beaven malted for many years for the Guinness brewery in Dublin and later for the Guinness brewery, Park Royal, London, until his death in 1941. He was awarded his Honorary Doctorate at Cambridge University in 1922 for his services to agriculture through plant breeding and also received the Horace Brown medal from the Institute of Brewing.

After Dr. Beaven’s death and throughout the 1939/45 War, the malting business was administered by the trustees of Dr. Beaven’s estate under the direction of Mr. Harold Sims. The maltings continued to produce malt for the Guinness brewery at Park Royal still using the old, traditional methods.

1947 saw the formation of E. S. Beaven (Maltings) Ltd., as a subsidiary of Arthur Guinness Son & Co. (Great Britain) Ltd. This company then operated from Market Place and Pound Street Maltings, Warminster, and Montpelier Maltings, Bristol, and the East Street office Warminster. Dr Beaven’s daughter, Miss Alice Beaven, was appointed a director in 1948 and remained on the board until her death in 1970. Mr Harold Wickham was manager of the maltings from 1947 to 1952, when he retired and was succeeded by Mr. Norman Oakey.

Mr. Norman Oakey was tragically killed in 1971 in a car accident on the Bath to Warminster road, when returning from buying barley at the Bristol market. Mr. Hugh Turner was then appointed manager and subsequently a director of the company.

A ‘Winkler pressure’ kiln was installed at Pound Street Maltings in 1952, replacing the number 2 conical, coal-fired kiln. In addition, a new barley store to hold approximately 1,000 tonnes of barley was added at the rear of the malthouse. 1961 saw an increase in production at Pound Street Maltings by virtue of the use of partial mechanisation on the malt floors and kiln loading.

In 1968, the Market Place Maltings, Warminster, which had been run entirely by one man, with barley and malt being conveyed to and from Pound Street, was closed when the process operative retired, and in 1971, the Bristol Montpelier Maltings being in a very poor state of repair, were also closed.

In recent years, in spite of its age and the constant competition from modem, mechanical maltings both in Great Britain and abroad, the Pound Street Maltings continued to prosper and produce quality malt for its parent company. In addition, Warminster became the administration centre for the Beaven Group, which has maltings in Diss and Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.

At the time of these notes going to press, the closure of the Pound Street Maltings was announced by its parent company who said they would continue operations from their other ma/rings, particularly in Scotland, from July 1994 onwards.

A Visit To The Pound Street Malthouse, Warminster

Monday 22nd May 1989

Danny Howell writes ~

Some of the members of the Warminster History Society were shown around the Pound Street Maltings, Warminster, by Hugh Turner and Chris Garrett.

The Maltings were built in 1879, on the site of Dr. Bleeck’s former house, and were originally in the hands of the Morgan family, who were brewers in the town. Dr. Edwin Sloper Beaven married William Frank Morgan’s sister, and Dr. Beaven went on to take over all the malthouses in Warminster including the one in the Market Place (at Chinn’s Yard). He also had a malthouse at Montpelier in Bristol. He worked in close connection with the head brewer at Guinness’ in Dublin. Dr. Beaven, who found world-wide fame as a barley breeder, died in 1941, and the Trustees of his estate ran the Pound Street Maltings until 1947, when they sold to Guinness, who still run the operation today [1989].

The key to good malt is the quality of the barley used. That at the Pound Street Maltings comes from local farmers, although in seasons when good barley is in short supply it is also acquired from outside Wiltshire, from Devon, Cornwall and Hampshire. The further away it is makes it more expensive. The barley is brought via grain merchants, between July and September, and all is delivered in by bulk lorries. Barley in the field has a moisture content of about 16 per cent but it is dried to a figure nearer 12 per cent, making it safe to store. A large store at Pound Street holds 1,200 tons of barley for the year, and the Maltings has additional storage space at Codford on a site south of the A36.

The first part of the malting process is to steep the grain in water, which raises the moisture level to 44 per cent and prompts the grain to start germination. The barley is dropped into the steep tank from the store, in batches of 10 tons each day. The amount is measured by the rise in the water level. Two-thirds of the water required for steeping is taken from a well, the remainder coming from the local supply. The amount of well water alleviates any problems with regards chlorine or other additives. Although the Maltings find it cheaper to use their own water, they are charged for all the water they dispose of via the local sewer.

It is not possible to leave the grain submerged in the water for more than 12 hours, otherwise it becomes smothered and dies. The problem is resolved by wetting the grain for three separate periods over 72 hours. Air can be blown through the water, and the use of spray bars also helps to ensure even germination. The optimum water temperature is 54 to 55 degrees fahrenheit.

After steeping, the grain is emptied from the tank via an auger but 80 per cent of the removal has to be assisted manually – by a man with a shovel. Ten tons of barley with a 44 per cent moisture content makes for 14 tons weight, and a fit worker is required to aid the transfer. The germinating barley is then spread, about six inches deep on the first two of the germination floors (five tons on each floor), where it continues to germinate. The optimum temperature for the floors is again 54 to 55 degrees fahrenheit and this is regulated by heating in the winter and by opening or closing the windows in the summer. Hot summer days, similar to the one chosen for our visit, make conditions too hot and difficult. That’s why the old traditional maltsters stopped production at the end of May. The colder months of November to February, when the temperature can be controlled with additional heating, are more suited for malting.

The barley spends four days on the four germination floors, and because it is hot there is a tendency for the sprouting roots to become tangled. To prevent this, the grain is raked by a man pulling a kind of three-pronged hoe with a flat blade. This is known at the Warminster Maltings as “dragging” but at malthouses in other districts, particularly Norfolk, it is referred to as “ploughing.” It turns the grain over and gets air into it and if done sufficiently stops the material matting together. This can be done up to four times a day and varies according to the temperature conditions. The men often have to come back after normal working hours, in the evening, on overtime, to repeat this process. The method is traditional, and in the early days the grain was moved about by men using wooden forks and shovels. Today’s shovels are made of aluminium, which makes them lighter to handle. Dust can be a problem, particularly with the original barley, but face-masks are worn by the men.

Another device used for moving the grain on the germination floor, preventing matting and getting the air in, is an electric machine called a Robinson Turner. It resembles a lawnmower and is towed backwards by a man through the material, the rotating blades throwing the grain up in the air before it falls back on to the floor. This is an additional job done each day and the number of times again depends on the temperature. During the last stage, on the fourth and final floor, the barley becomes red hot (too hot at the time of our visit).

The germination process tricks the grain into thinking it has started life in the field, and the germination converts the starch in the grains into simple sugars – exactly what the brewer wants. The maltster likes to see five curly rootlets on each germinated grain. This really depends on the barley brought in, and it is tested on arrival for quality. Unsuitable barley is rejected.

After the allotted time on the floors, the germination has to be terminated by kilning the grain to get the water out. Heating in the kiln reduces the moisture content to four per cent. The buildings at Pound Street contain four old brick kilns but only two are used at the present time for drying the barley. These were once coal-fired but an oil burner, cast by Carson & Toone at Carson’s Yard in Warminster, and patented by Dr. Beaven, is still in use today. The names of Carson and Toone could be plainly seen on the iron doors of the kiln. Alternatively to oil, gas can be used. The kiln is in use 20 hours out of every 24, which leaves only a few hours to load and unload it, which is done manually (a hot and uncomfortable job). Because of the constant process it is important the kiln does not break down. It reaches an incredible 175 degrees fahrenheit and costs £3,000 a month to run.

After kilning, the rootlets (known as malt culns) are removed from the grains. The rootlets and very tiny grains are extracted through a screen which came from Bailey’s Maltings in Frome and was installed in 1890 at the Pound Street Maltings, where it has been used daily ever since. The rootlets are used to make cattle feed; some are sold direct to Corsley farmer Bob Jones, and the rest are sold to a commercial feed manufacturer. The Guinness maltings in Norfolk have their own machinery for converting the rootlets into cattle feed pellets.

The malt grain which is left looks remarkably similar to the original barley. The only difference is the fact that the starch within has changed to sugars, which make the grain very dry and brittle. If you bite the grain it tastes of Horlicks. The final stage is the transfer of the malt grain into a bin where it is discharged into a bulk lorry outside for the journey to the brewer. All the malt from the Pound Street Maltings goes to Guinness’ Park Royal Brewery in London. Park Royal do not take deliveries of malt after 10 a.m., so if a lorry of malt leaves Warminster in the afternoon, it has to wait on the outskirts of London overnight before going into the Brewery first thing in the morning.

Six men are employed on a permanent basis at the Pound Street Maltings, taking care of the seven day process, but they do get time off. Before the War the labour was seasonal, with the men finding casual work during harvest time. The Pound Street Maltings are one of only two traditional floor malthouses still operating in the South West; the other being Tucker’s at Crediton in Devon. Most of today’s malthouses are in East Anglia.

Guinness own two malthouses in Norfolk, at Diss and Great Yarmouth, but both are bigger than the Pound Street Maltings. The Norfolk ones produce 13,000 tons of malt per year, compared to 2,500 tons at Warminster. All three malthouses use the same haulage firm, from Diss; the drivers constantly draying malt from Norfolk and Warminster to the Park Royal Brewery. Warminster is used as the administrative base for the three malthouses with offices at East Street.

Dr. Beaven’s malthouse at Chinn’s Yard was a one-man seven-days-a-week operation. It closed in 1968 when the man retired and no one was fool enough to take it on single-handed every day of the week. Within a year of the Chinn’s Yard malthouse closing, production at Pound Street was ironically increased and the extra output easily outstripped that of the Market Place operation.

As well as brewing, malt is also used in the production of beverages and breakfast cereals.

Fire At Pound Street Maltings, Warminster

Friday 26th February 1982

Firemen from Warminster, Frome and Westbury attended a fire at the Pound Street Maltings, Warminster, in the early hours of Saturday 20th February 1982.

Led by Station Officer Gerald Francis the Warminster firemen had to break down a pair of double doors to get inside the building. They were soon joined by the crews from Frome and Westbury. Five and a half hours were spent fighting the fire in the roof of the top floor of the maltings. At one stage, flames billowed 20 feet high in the night sky.

A third of the roof area was destroyed. Repairing the damage has been estimated to cost in the region of £3,500. The skills of the firefighters limited the loss of grain to about one ton and a half. Production of malt was able to continue on the Saturday morning, thanks to the workmen of R. Butcher & Son, the Warminster builders, who arrived, stripping and sheeting down the roof preventing heat from being lost.

The Director of Beaven’s Maltings, Mr. Hugh Turner, praised the firefighters for their actions. The cause of the fire is being investigated, but arson has already been ruled out.

Warminster Was Once Famous For Malt

Monday 30th August 1971

 In the book Industrial Archaeology In Wiltshire, edited by Kenneth G. Ponting, published in August 1971 by the Wiltshire Archaeolgical & Natural History Society and Wiltshire County Council, reference is made to the Pound Street Malthouse, Warminster, in the section titled Miscellaneous:

“Warminster, Pound Street Malthouse (ST.875452). Warminster was once famous for its Malt, which was used all over the West of England and in 1818 there were 25 malthouses at work. Only one is now in use, a large stone building in Pound Street, erected in 1879.”

The Changing Face Of Warminster ~ Malting

Extract from The Changing Face Of Warminster by Wilfred Middlebrook, published in 1971:

Industry is represented in Pound Street by the malthouse and the greetings card factory. The malthouse was built on the site of a private dwelling house, where Dr. Bleeck was born in 1805. It was a house with beautiful oaken floors and doors, and a handsome staircase. The Bleeck family afterwards lived in the Market Place, and Dr. Bleeck bought an old factory in West Street – now a tenement block it still bears his name.

Daniell tells us that, besides the large trade in wheat and barley, from 1700 to 1800 great quantities of malt were made in Warminster, with more than sixty malthouses at work. There was little malt made in Somerset and Devon, so that there was a constant stream of traffic from these counties to Warminster, with packhorses and mules bringing sacks of coal and returning with sacks of malt. Today there is only one malthouse; this is the large malthouse in Pound Street. A small one in Chinn’s Yard, behind the Market Place, was closed in recent years.

The Pound Street Malthouse carries the name of William Frank Morgan over the door, but for many years it was run by Dr. Edwin Sloper Beaven. William Morgan founded the firm of Morgan and Bladworth, who malted in many old malthouses in the town. The Morgan malthouse was behind Silver Street, being eventually destroyed by fire, and Obelisk Terrace was erected on the site.

Frank Morgan was the son of William, and, besides being closely associated with the Congregational Church, he was for many years the Chairman of the Urban District Council and a great benefactor to the town. It was through the efforts of Frank Morgan over a period of twenty years that a through way was finally opened in Common Close. On his retirement, Frank Morgan was presented with a magnificent set of silver plate, bequeathed on his death to the town for use on civic occasions.

When Dr. Beaven ran the Pound Street Malthouse he also ran the little old malthouse at the rear of Chinn’s Yard, and was delighted to show visitors around this “one-man’ malthouse. One old-timer, called William Garrett, used to insist that he was a “malter’ and not a “malster,’ citing as his reason the terms “spinner’ and “spinster,’ thus implying that a “malster’ was a woman. Just below the Pound Street Malthouse was for many years a little Methodist Mission House, and across the way is Pound Row, leading to West Street.

A Malthouse At Vicarage Street, Warminster, At The Time Of The 1891 Census

Sunday 5th April 1891

The 1891 Census for Warminster, taken on Sunday 5th April 1891, records a malthouse at Vicarage Street, Warminster.

The census enumerator recorded it between Golspie House and 13 Vicarage Street.

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Number on schedule: 7a.
Road, Street, &c., and no. or name of house: Vicarage Street, Malthouse.

Name: William Brown.
Relation to head of family: –
Condition as to marriage: Widower.
Male or Female: Male.
Age last birthday: 63.
Profession or occupation: Maltster.
Employer, Employed or neither: Employed.
Place where born: Corsley, Wiltshire.

Maltsters In Warminster, 1822

In the Warminster entries of J. Pigot’s Commercial Directory, 1822:

Maltsters

William Currier, The Close.

John Green & Son, Market Place.

Stephen Hunt, East Street.

William Langley senior, East Street.

Samuel Lawes, East Street.

Thomas Moody, George Street.

Jeremiah Morgan, Boreham.

John Thomas Morgan, Silver Street.

Thomas Pearce Morgan, Silver Street.

William and John Patients, West Street.

Christopher Pearce, West Street.

William Smith, The Close.

James Webley, Market Place.

Stephen White, Church Street.

John Young, George Street.

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