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Morgan's Mount

Morgan's Mount
Chester city walls.jpg
Chester city walls and Morgan's Mount
Location Chester, Cheshire, England
Coordinates 53°11′36″N 2°53′45″W / 53.19328°N 2.89588°W / 53.19328; -2.89588Coordinates: 53°11′36″N 2°53′45″W / 53.19328°N 2.89588°W / 53.19328; -2.89588
OS grid reference SJ 402 666
Built 1645
Listed Building – Grade I
Designated 28 July 1955
Reference no. 1376134
Morgan's Mount is located in Cheshire
Morgan's Mount
Location in Cheshire

Morgan's Mount is a structure extending from the north site of the city walls of Chester, in Cheshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.

It was constructed in 1645 during the siege of Chester in the Civil War as an observation platform and gun emplacement. After the Battle of Rowton Heath in September of that year, a gun on the Mount was destroyed by Parliamentary forces. It was originally named the Raised Square Platform, and is said to have been named later after the Royalist Captain William Morgan, or his son, Edward.

The Mount is constricted in red sandstone coursed rubble, and is rectangular in shape. It contains a chamber at the level of the walkway, with barred openings to the west and the north. Two flights of five steps lead up to the roof, which has a stone parapet surmounted by an iron railing. At the northeast corner of the roof is an L-shaped stone bench.

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