Saturday, 18 February 2012

Darwen Tower Top - Part 1

Darwen Tower on Darwen Hill or Jubilee Tower on Beacon Hill to give it it's correct title was built to commemorate  Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee and to celebrate the victory of local people for the right to access the moor.


Darwen Tower
It was built by two stonemasons Peter Brindle & Harry Flew, they walked from Brindle every day to work on the tower refusing to stay over in Darwen because they had to tend to their gardens back at home. You can not begin to imagine walking from Brindle to the summit of Darwen Moor to begin work often in cold, wet and windy conditions before walking back home again to do the gardening! 

It was opened on 24th Sept 1898 and had cost £773. 3s. 5d. it had taken two years and three months to complete.




A Brief History of Tops!

In the severe winter of 1947 the original wooden top blew off. By 1971 the tower was starting to show signs of wear & tear, topless, battered by the weather, abused by vandals  there was talk of bricking it up or even demolishing it. Thanks largely to the efforts of the Mayor Dr. Bill Lees and local funding in 1971 the tower was repaired and a new top was put in place.

However in a 70-80mph gale on the 21-Mar-2007 the weather vane blew off. A local engineering company W.E.C. who had originally made the weathervane offered to replace it. 


Scaffolding had to be erected in order to do this, as seen on this photograph taken by John Lenehan on 25-Jan-2008. 

Finally on the 11-Nov-2010 the entire top blew off in 80mph gale force winds and the council had to remove it.






Of course the local pro-photographer, in red, was there to record the occasion. 

Once the top was loaded on a trailer and secured the debris had to be collected which had become strewn around the tower.
The Morning After The Night Before!


Not all of the debris made it to the ground and needed assistance from the first floor...


and some from the very top.



Fortunately 'The Darwen Strongman' was on hand, who needs a crane?

and given an audience he couldn't resist the opportunity to demonstrate his physical prowess!


Once all the debris was cleared and loaded along with the broken top, the tractor commenced its descent from the tower.


and the initial descent is very steep.

Then down the moor past Darwen's other famous landmark the 'India Mill Chimney' with the paparazzi in hot pursuit!


To Be Continued.............

2 comments:

  1. Hi Keith! Thanks for that bit of local history, can’t wait for Part 2! Especially impressed by those stonemasons. Was it really their gardens that brought them back home every day or something else? I wonder... Hope you’re back is better!
    Julie xo

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    1. Hi Julie, I think they came home for their Dinner! Keith
      Hope you enjoy episode 2

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