Site overview
St Monans Windmill And Saltpans formed part of the St Philips saltworks, constructed on the St Monans shore in 1772. The wind-engine tower pumped sea water uphill for the salt-making process, while coal was brought to the pans from nearby workings.
Map
History
St Monans Windmill And Saltpans is an eighteenth-century industrial complex on the coast east of St Monans in Fife. The St Philips saltworks were constructed in 1772 and remained operational into the 1820s. The wind-engine tower is circular, slightly tapered, built of rubble and sandstone, and stands on a raised shoreline above the remains of the panhouses.
It was used to pump sea water uphill through a rock-cut channel so that brine could feed the salt pans by gravity. The saltworks included panhouses, a wagonway connection for coal supply, rock-cut channels, reservoir features and foreshore remains. The wind-engine tower was reconstructed in the early 1990s, with reroofing, replacement wind-engine features, a stair and viewing platform.
The monument was first scheduled on 28 September 1993 and the scheduled area was amended on 22 July 2011. No original wind machinery survives in working condition.