Flounders' Folly

Flounders' Folly

Flounders' Folly is a tower, built in 1838, on Callow Hill, between Craven Arms and Ludlow, Shropshire, England. The tower is approximately convert|80|ft|m tall and convert|16|ft|m square and is clearly visible (on the skyline) from the Cardiff-Crewe railway line, just north of Craven Arms and also from the busy A49 Shrewsbury to Hereford road. The folly is sometimes mistaken for a fire-tower.

Many walks ascend the hill from various points and it is mentioned in many walking guides to Shropshire.

History

It dates from 1838, when it was erected by Benjamin Flounders (1768—1846) to mark the boundaries between four large estates and maybe to celebrate his attaining his 70th year, his 'threescore years and ten'.

Over the years following Flounders' death the tower slowly fell into disrepair [http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/94176] on its exposed hilltop (it stands on Callow Hill, which is part of the same system as Wenlock Edge). Already in need of restoration in the 1920s, by the 1980s it was in a dangerous and unstable condition; the castellated top of the tower collapsed in 1987. It had changed hands several times and was owned for a time at least by the actress Julie Christie who had a house nearby for a few years.

In 2001 it was bought by what became The Flounders Folly Trust. With public interest awakened and funding from public and other sources such as The Heritage Lottery Fund forthcoming, a very professional restoration programme was commenced in 2001 and completed by 2005. At its re-opening HRH Princess Anne, The Princess Royal, flew in by a helicopter of the Royal Flight to declare the folly restoration complete, and the tower is now open to the public at least once a month. The views from the top encompass the Shropshire Hills AONB, Wenlock Edge, the Long Mynd, both Clee Hills, the Radnorshire / Welsh hills; views south reach as far as Mortimer Forest, the Brecon Beacons, Black Mountains and Malvern Hills.

Folklore

There are a few apocryphal stories, now spun into the local and regional folklore, traditionally known and told locally that it was built so that Mr. Flounders could see his ships coming in and out of the Bristol Channel (or the Mersey)—neither of which are actually visible from the tower—and that when he discovered that he could not do so because of high ground in between he killed himself by jumping off the top of the tower, or conversely descended the tower in a great huff roaring "Take it down!" meaning either the tower or the high ground. Some say he wanted to see his house in Ludlow from the tower — there are no records of him having owned or rented a house in Ludlow, where although he was for very many years a very frequent visitor he preferred to stay at The Angel on Broad Street. There are also no known records of his having ships or interests in Liverpool or Bristol, as he was a man hailing from the north-east of England, near Stockton-on-Tees.

References

* Follies, Headley & Meulenkamp, Jonathan Cape 1986 ISBN 0-224-02790-5
* Monumental Follies, Barton, Lyle Publications 1972 ISBN 0-902921-07-X
* The Middle Marches, Baker & Morris, Robert Hale 1983 ISBN 0-7090-0923-2
* Flounders Folly - 'The Story of A Shropshire Folly and Its Builder' Belinda Cousens / The Flounders Folly Trust 2005
* 50 Walks in Shropshire, Julie Royle, AA, 2003, ISBN 007495-3632-2

External links

* [http://www.floundersfolly.org.uk Flounders Folly Restoration Project Website]
* [http://www.odd-stuff.info/follies/flounders.htm Images of Flounders Folly on Odd-stuff!]


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