Vandalian Tower

The Vandalian Tower at Harting, West Sussex, England, is an 18th century folly, built to commemorate the British colony of Vandalia, a short-lived colony that disappeared with the spread of America.[1] It sits on the summit of Tower Hill.

Vandalian Tower
General information
StatusRuin
Completed1774
Design and construction
ArchitectHenry Keene

Today the ruin is owned by the descendants of the Fetherstonhaugh family who bought the neighbouring estate of Uppark, now owned by the National Trust. It was listed as a scheduled monument in 1976.[2]

History

The tower was built in 1774, designed by English architect Henry Keene for Sir Matthew Fetherstonhaugh, to celebrate the founding of the colony of Vandalia.[2][3] The tower was quickly abandoned, possibly out of embarrassment of the failure of Vandalia.

In the late 18th century, Emma Hamilton is said to have frequently watched for Lord Nelson's ship arriving from the tower. This lead to it being referred to by locals as “Lady Hamilton’s Folly,”[1][4] The tower was partly destroyed by fire in 1842 and the ruins were stabilised in 1982.[2]

gollark: I blame quirks of human audio systems.
gollark: Weird.
gollark: IIRC that preserves the input frequency.
gollark: I am vaguely aware of this, yes.
gollark: Why would there be lower frequency sounds in the 16kHz?

References

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