- The Bridestones
Subsequent destruction
The largest single ransacking of the monument was the removal of several hundred tons to construct the nearby turnpike road. Stones from the monument were also taken to build the nearby house and farm; other stones were used in an ornamental garden in
Tunstall Park . The holed stone was broken some time before 1854; the top half was found replaced in 1877, but was gone again by 1935.While the southern side of the main chamber was originally a single, 18ft long stone, it was split in 1843 by a picknicker's bonfire. Of the portal stones, only two remain, one of which is broken and concreted back together. This was reputedly caused by an engineer from the
Manchester Ship Canal , who used the stone to demonstrate a detonator.Excavations of the site were done by Professor Fleur of
Manchester University in 1936 and 1937, with the aim of restoring the site as much as possible to its former condition.References
External links
* Coordinates: coord|53.156845|N|2.142029|W|type:landmark
*
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