*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lilburn Tower

Lilburn Tower
Hurlestone Tower, Lilburn, Northumberland.jpg
The Hurlestone Tower at Lilburn - and not to be confused with Lilburn Tower - is a lookout tower erected in 2000 and furnished for conferences and meetings
The Hurlestone - Lilburn, Northumberland.jpg
The Hurlestone at Lilburn. Reputedly the devil, standing on The Cheviot, saw St. Cuthbert and hurled the stone at him. Hurlestone Tower is sited on a line between the Hurlestone and Lilburn Tower.
Lilburn Tower is located in Northumberland
Lilburn Tower
Lilburn Tower
Lilburn Tower shown within Northumberland
OS grid reference NU024243
Coordinates 55°30′47″N 1°57′48″W / 55.513068°N 1.963220°W / 55.513068; -1.963220Coordinates: 55°30′47″N 1°57′48″W / 55.513068°N 1.963220°W / 55.513068; -1.963220
List of places
UK
England
Northumberland

Lilburn Tower is a privately owned 19th century mansion house at Lilburn, near Wooler, Northumberland. The property is a Grade II* listed building and forming part of the Lilburn Estate. A number of discrete buildings and monuments are scattered across the grange, including the Hurlestone, Hurlestone Tower, and an astronomical observatory.

The ancient manors of East and West Lilburn were united when both were purchased separately by John Clennell of the Clennel family of Clennell Hall about 1700. The ruinous remains of the old 15th century manor house, known as West Lilburn Tower which incorporated a pele tower are scheduled as an Ancient Monument and protected by Grade II listed building status.

On the death of Thomas Clennel, the estate devolved to his nephew, Henry Collingwood, who was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1793. The estate was bequeathed to Henry John William Collingwood of Cornhill in the 1820s and in 1828 he began the construction of the imposing new Elizabethan style mansion designed by architect John Dobson. The house, to be known as Lilburn Tower, was eventually finished in 1842 at a cost of some £25,000. Collingwood himself designed the park and gardens. He was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1832.

On 3 January 1829, the foundation stone of the mansion house was laid in an elaborate ceremony under direction of the architect. A time capsule of various items was deposited beneath the stone: "two glass vessels, one containing the different coins of the reign of George IV, the other a newspaper of the 3rd of January, together with a MS. containing the following names: — 'Robert Hall, Alnwick, mason; Thomas Wallace and Sons, Newcastle, carpenters and joiners; Ralph Dodds, Newcastle, plasterer; Robert Wallace, clerk of the works.' Both vessels were sealed with the arms of Collingwood."


...
Wikipedia

...