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The Great Britain Guide

Memorials & monuments · West Midlands

Jubilee Stone

Free admission

Jubilee Stone is a memorial in the United Kingdom.

Ratley High Street - geograph.org.uk - 3651007

John Sutton — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–45 min
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

Jubilee Stone is a public memorial in Warwickshire, the West Midlands, recording local sacrifice and named in the parish register of war and civic monuments. The site is within the Cotswolds National Landscape (AONB). It sits within the Kenilworth and Southam parliamentary constituency. Postcode area OX15.

Photo gallery

Protected designations

  • Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty: Cotswolds

Designations sourced from Natural England open data under OGL v3.

From the Wikipedia article

The octagonal Jubilee Tower (officially called Darwen Tower) on Darwen Hill overlooking the town of Darwen in Lancashire, England, was completed in 1898 to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. It also commemorated the victory of the local people for the right of access to the surrounding moors. It was opened to the public on 24 September 1898. The tower is 85 feet (25.9 m) in height; Darwen Hill (also known as Beacon Hill) is 1,220 feet (370 metres) above sea-level. Walkers can climb to the top of the tower via the internal staircase to see views of North Yorkshire, Morecambe Bay, Blackpool Tower, Cumbria, the Isle of Man, North Wales, Derbyshire, elsewhere in Lancashire, and surrounding moorland.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

Packmen, pedlars, farmers and labourers used tracks and moorland paths to go about their business, but in the 19th century landowners began blocking ancient rights of way. In the 1870s the Lord of the manor of Over Darwen – and absentee landlord – the Reverend William Arthur Duckworth blocked paths so as to prevent public access to the moor. Game-shooting rights were lucrative and Duckworth did not wish to have his land devalued by its use by the public exercising its rights of way. William Thomas Ashton, manager of Eccles Shorrock's mines at Dogshaw Clough and Entwistle Moss, used the moorland footpaths to deliver coal to farmers and other customers. Whenever Duckworth's gamekeepers…

Architecture

The council insisted that the main contractors should all be local to Darwen. The subsequent competition for the design of the tower was won by David Ellison, an employee in the borough surveyor's office. His design was later modified by his senior, the borough surveyor, Robert William Smith-Saville. The builder was R. J. Whalley of Darwen. The eastern and western pediments of the tower carry commemorative plaques. The eastern one reads: The western plaque records the names of the mayor and local dignitaries involved in the building of the tower. It names Smith-Saville as architect, and omits mention of Ellison, the original designer. and by another author as "a phallic object … for all the…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.1238, -1.4438
County
Warwickshire
Parish
Ratley and Upton
Postcode
OX15 6DT
Parliamentary constituency
Kenilworth and Southam
Established
1898

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Jubilee Stone?
Jubilee Stone is in Warwickshire, the West Midlands, United Kingdom (postcode OX15 6DT), in the parish of Ratley and Upton.
When was Jubilee Stone built?
Built or established in 1898.
Is Jubilee Stone a protected site?
Yes — Jubilee Stone is part of the Cotswolds National Landscape (AONB).
Is Jubilee Stone free to visit?
Yes, Jubilee Stone is free to enter.
How do I get to Jubilee Stone?
Drivers can navigate to postcode OX15 6DT. It sits within the Kenilworth and Southam parliamentary constituency.