One of the special features of the village was the considerable effort that went into securing a plentiful supply of water for its water powered industries, including two tunnels cut through the soft red sandstone, the longest being at least 1000 feet or around 300 metres in length. The date of construction is unclear, however the 1747 dam could only have functioned if the tunnels were in place. The village had at least four mills, including a corn and saw mill, a woollen and lint mills, also a curling stone mill and in one of the mills snuff boxes were manufactured. The corn and saw mill buildings still stand on the course of the old lade, next to Haugh Farm (2012). The 25 in. OS maps show a stone bath or cistern at the bottom of the Kingen Cleugh Glen where all the burn's waters and those of the Damhead Weir lade and tunnel (at least 300 metres long from NS 4992 2530 to NS 5005 2533) were diverted and collected, leaving via a short tunnel cut through the rock and then running down to the Haugh village along an open lade. In 1837 a woollen mill, as well as the previously noted combined corn and saw mill, were present, all drawing water from the aforementioned cistern and lade, about a quarter of a mile upstream. As stated, the lade was tunnelled through the soft red sandstone of the river gorge, and the tunnel mouths can still be seen, as can two stone arched footbridges over the lade, and an overflow sluice. No traces of the woollen mill, which in 1837 employed thirty persons spinning yarn for a
Kilmarnock carpet factory, have survived. This mill was the first in sequence to receive the lade waters. The 19th century
OS map shows that a smithy was located opposite Haugh Farm and a malt kiln lay to the west of it. In 1846 a mill was based in the village that sharpened reaping hooks.
The Curling Stone mill The curling stone mill, T. and A. Kay's first factory, stood to the left of the lane to the Ballochmyle Creamery and had a loop on its lade that allowed water to be diverted away from it when so desired.
Ailsa Craig granite was used 'from about 1780'. Andrew Kay began producing stones at the Haugh in the 1860s. The business stayed in this small factory for over 40 years before moving to Barskimming Road in Mauchline in 1911. The company, now known as
Kays of Scotland, is still in existence, supplying curling stones to places as diverse as Bulgaria, Israel and Japan.
The Ballochmyle Creamery A lint mill used to occupy this site, subsequently purchased circa 1890 for use as a creamery and margarine factory. Pioneering work in the development of
margarine was carried out here, especially a type that was suited to puff pastry production. The blue tilework bands on the building gave the name of the
'Blue Band' margarine type according to local tradition. Jurgens, later part of Unilever, purchased the factory in the mid-1920s and margarine production continued until after WWII. The old Ballochmyle Creamery factory complex sits at the end of a short lane at the point at which the long lade from Damhead Weir finally enters the River Ayr. It was built around 1900 in an unusual Swiss-style. The building is now unused (datum 2013) after a period of time when it was the site of an optical works that finally closed around 1987. ; Views at the Haugh File:Haugh Mill Lade Tunnel - Kingencleugh.JPG|The lade tunnel exit from Robert Burns' Bath in the Kingen Cleugh Glen. File:Robert Burns' Bath - steps.JPG|The steps down to Robert Burns' Bath in the Kingen Cleugh Glen. File:Kingen Cleugh Glen - Robert Burns' bath.JPG|Robert Burns' Bath - the old cistern in the Kingen Cleugh Glen. File:Haugh Holm.JPG|The Haugholm at the Haugh. File:Damhead Ford - Kingencleugh.JPG|The old ford near Damhead over the River Ayr. File:Old weirs - Kingencleugh - River Ayr.JPG|The site of the weirs near Damhead Cottage (now demolished). File:River Ayr at Haugholm.JPG|The site of the old Haugholm Ford from the road bridge. ==Micro-history==