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Lambotte mill in Aumale en Seine-Maritime

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Moulin
Seine-Maritime

Lambotte mill in Aumale

    2 Rue Saint-Lazare
    76390 Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Minoterie Lambotte à Aumale
Crédit photo : Markus3 (Marc ROUSSEL) - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1848
Destruction of the Roy Mill
1850
Construction of the first mill
1898
Repurchase by Henri Lambotte
1901
Installation of a heavy oil engine
1904
New 16-20 cv turbine
1910
Capacity of 200 quintals/day
1952
Animal feed diversification
1970
Final closure
4 octobre 2004
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

All the buildings, each in its entirety, namely: the operating building and its annex, the hydraulic mechanisms, including the wheel building, and the entrance gate (Box AS 172, 173 and on the course of Bresle, public domain, not cadastralized): classification by order of 4 October 2004

Key figures

Henri Lambotte - Industrial miller Buyer and moderniser of milling in 1898.
Lyonnel François - Partner of Lambotte Co-founder of the company Lambotte et Cie in 1902.
René Lambotte - Son of Henry, last operator Directs the mill until it is closed in 1970.
Jean Lambotte - Son of Henry, animal feed specialist Diversify activity after 1952.
M. Dubourguet - Post-fire operator (1898) Rebuild the mill after the disaster.
Jacques Gallemand - Founder of the college (1595) Former occupant of the site before the mill.

Origin and history

The Lambotte Mill is a disused factory located in Aumale, Seine-Maritime, built at the site of an old Roy mill destroyed in 1848. In 1850, a first mill was installed there, before being modernized in 1898 by Henri Lambotte, who added a turbine and cylinder machines. The factory, organized in three workshops, operates until 1970, when it was finally closed.

The building, built of brick and metal frame, retains all its original machinery and equipment, mostly dating from the late 19th century. It includes a four-level mill (reception, grinding, sieving, cleaning), a wheat washing and drying workshop, and a third concrete building for storage. The site, powered by the Bresle, illustrates the technical evolution of the mills towards industrialization.

Classified as a historic monument in 2004, the Lambotte Mill is a rare example of in situ conservation of a complete industrial complex, with its 30 machines, silos, and hydraulic installations. Its history reflects local economic transformations, from milling crafts to industrial production, fire, reconstruction and successive modernization.

Prior to milling, the site housed a college founded in 1595 by Jacques German, then a metal mill in the 19th century, before being transformed into a wheat mill. Repurchase by the Lambotte brothers in 1902, the factory reached a capacity of 200 quintals a day in 1910, employing seven workers. After 1952, it became diversified in animal feed before it ceased its activity in 1972.

Today, the site remains disused but preserved in its original state, with its buildings, mechanisms (turbine, heavy oil engine, grinding cylinders) and tools. The archives also mention war damage that led to the construction of a concrete workshop at the back of the courtyard, marking the adaptation of the factory to the historical contexts of the twentieth century.

External links