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Windmill in Carretou in Mascarville en Haute-Garonne

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine rural
Moulin
Moulin à vent
Haute-Garonne

Windmill in Carretou in Mascarville

    D66G
    31460 Mascarville
Moulin à vent en Carretou à Mascarville
Moulin à vent en Carretou à Mascarville
Crédit photo : Didier Descouens - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Renaissance
Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1600
1700
1800
1900
2000
1648
Initial construction
1832
Construction of twin mill
1963
Final judgment
1983
Restoration
27 janvier 1992
Historical Monument
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Windmill, dit En Carretou (Box B 553): inscription by order of 27 January 1992

Key figures

Hippolyte Cazeneuve - Last miller Died in 1963, marking the end of the mill.

Origin and history

The windmill called En Carretou, located in Mascarville, Occitanie, is one of the oldest in the great southwest. Wearing the 1648 vintage on its turn, it is distinguished by its truncated structure in Roman bellows and bricks, typical of Lauragais. Built on a hillside, it was equipped with a door in the middle of the hanger and a bay to hoist the grain bags, with wooden wheels operating 1.70 m in diameter. This mill, coupled with a second one dated 1832, formed a complex including a miller's house and a small water mill, supplying the local population with wheat or corn flour until the end of the 19th century.

The mill En Carretou ceased its activity in 1963, after the death of its last miller, Hippolyte Cazeneuve. Its shingle roof and rudder were restored in 1983. Ranked Historic Monument by order of 27 January 1992, it bears witness to the technical ingenuity of the southwestern windmills and their central role in the rural economy. The site, although partially abandoned in the 20th century, retains traces of its original functioning, including its internal mechanisms and architecture adapted to local winds.

The mill illustrates the evolution of milling techniques between the 17th and 19th centuries, from artisanal production to semi-industrial activity. Its gradual abandonment in the twentieth century reflects the agricultural transformations and the disappearance of small local mills, replaced by more modern infrastructure. Today, it is an emblematic heritage of Mascarville, linked to the agrarian history of Occitanie and the legacy of traditional know-how.

External links