To Worcestershire, where I was keen to indulge my love of
climbing towers with Broadway Tower, an eighteenth-century folly located on the top of Broadway
Hill, the second-highest point in the Cotswolds (it’s 1,024 feet above sea
level, whereas Cleeve Hill in Gloucestershire is 1,083 feet).
Built to resemble a castle at a time when follies were
all the rage among the landed classes, Broadway Tower is 65 feet tall and was the
brainchild of the famous landscape gardener Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown
although it designed by James Wyatt. It was completed in 1798. The money for
the project was provided by Lady Coventry; the second wife of the sixth Earl of
Coventry, she was curious as to whether a beacon atop Broadway Hill – a hill on
which beacons were lit on special occasions – could be seen from her home in
Worcester (22 miles away). The story goes that a fire was lit on the hill and,
after noting that she could see it from Worcester, Lady Coventry celebrated by
bankrolling the building of the folly (as you do).
In the nineteenth century, Broadway Tower played its part
in early moves to preserve historic buildings. In the early part of that century
it was owned by Sir Thomas Phillips, a book collector whose ambition was to own
a copy of every book in the world; he didn’t achieve that but he was able to
amass a collection of over 60,000 manuscripts and printed books, some of which
he kept at the tower along with his printing press. Later that same century, it
was used as a retreat for people involved with the Arts & Crafts movement like
the writer and textile-designer William Morris; even though Broadway Tower wasn’t
particularly old, he was so impressed by the place that he founded the Society
for the Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1877.
It’s sometimes described as being built in the ‘Saxon’
style, but I find that a bit dubious as stone castles only really started to be
built in this country after the Norman Conquest. Up close, it’s a three-sided
(and three-storey) structure, and the views from ground level are pretty good. I
was there on a particularly windy day, but that didn’t really matter too much;
more importantly, there was no rain and the sun was poking through the clouds –
a lovely November day, in other words. On the way up (there are two narrow
spiral staircases, one designated as ‘up’ and the other as ‘down’), the first
and second floors have little exhibits dedicated to William Morris and also to
the Royal Observer Corps (nearby there is a memorial to the crew of a Whitley
bomber that crashed close to the tower in 1943, and there’s also a Cold War
nuclear bunker close by).
From the top, the views are amazing – it’s said that at
least a dozen counties can be seen from it (sources vary, though, but that’s
probably more to do with local authority boundary changes over the years). As
well as the cities of Birmingham and Coventry, you can see as far west as the
mountains of Wales and as far east as the Chilterns. My only regret was that I
hadn’t bought my binoculars.
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