Broadway Tower, Worcestershire

Broadway Tower is a folly on Broadway Hill, near the large village of Broadway, in the English county of Worcestershire,[1] at the second-highest point of the Cotswolds (after Cleeve Hill).[2] Broadway Tower's base is 1,024 feet (312 metres) above sea level.[2] The tower itself stands 65 feet (20 metres) high.[1]

A view of Broadway Tower
Another view

History

The 'Saxon' tower was the brainchild of Capability Brown and designed by James Wyatt in 1794[3][4] in the form of a castle, and built for Lady Coventry in 1798–1799. The tower was built on a beacon hill, where beacons were lit on special occasions. Lady Coventry wondered whether a beacon on this hill could be seen from her house in Worcester — about 22 miles (35 km) away — and sponsored the construction of the folly to find out. Indeed, the beacon could be seen clearly.

For some years, the tower became home to the printing press of Sir Thomas Phillipps. By the mid-1870s, it was being rented by C J Stone and Cormell Price,[5] the latter being headmaster of the United Services College at Westward Ho!, and a close friend and confidant of artists William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti: "I am up at Crom Price's Tower among the winds and the clouds" Morris wrote in a letter to Aglaia Coronio in the summer of 1876.[6]

Near the tower is a memorial to the crew of an A.W.38 Whitley bomber that crashed there during a training mission in June 1943.

In the late 1950s, Broadway Tower monitored nuclear fallout in England; an underground Royal Observer Corps bunker was built 50 yards (46 m) from the Tower. Manned continuously from 1961 and designated as a master post, the bunker was one of the last such Cold War bunkers constructed and, although officially stood down in 1991, the bunker is now one of the few remaining fully equipped facilities in England.

Broadway Tower Country Park

The tower is a tourist attraction and the centre of a country park with various exhibitions open to the public at a fee, as well as a gift shop and restaurant.[1] The place is on the Cotswold Way and can be reached by following the Cotswold Way from the A44 road at Fish Hill, or by a steep climb out of Broadway village.

gollark: They aren't really capable of self-reference.
gollark: Reward being defined as paperclips, because people kept putting that in somehow.
gollark: Mostly they just iterated over all possible computable theories which could possibly explain their reality, and used that to deduce the actions with the highest expected rewards.
gollark: We didn't really set that at all, I was just saying we had Turing-test-passing ones.
gollark: We have a bunch of those, but they kept converting reality into paperclips.

References

  1. "Broadway Tower Country Park". Broadway Cotswolds. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  2. "Welcome to Broadway Tower". Broadway Tower: Cotswold Highest Castle. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  3. "History of Broadway Tower". Visit Broadway. January 2, 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2019.
  4. Dated drawings in the estate office at Croome Court, noted by Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600-1840, 3rd ed. (Yale University Press) 1995.
  5. Price, Lorraine (1983). "Cormell Price Esq., The Tower, Broadway" (PDF). The Journal of the William Morris Society. 5 (4): 30–39. ISSN 1756-1353. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2019-08-03. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  6. MacCarthy, Fiona (2015). William Morris: a Life for Our Time. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0571265831. OCLC 908630698.

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