Wainhouse Tower

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Wainhouse Tower

Yorkshire


Wainhouse Tower, Halifax
Type: Folly
Location
Grid reference: SE07842400
Location: 53°42’45"N, 1°52’58"W
History
Built 1871-1875
For: John Wainhouse
by Isaac Booth,
Richard Swarbrick Dugale
Folly
Information

Wainhouse Tower is a folly in the parish of King Cross, on the south-west side of Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire,[1] It was first intended to function as an industrial chimney, but designed as an extravagant ornament and a viewing tower.

At 275 feet, this is the tallest structure in the area and may be the tallest folly in the world. The tower is a Grade II* listed building,[2] and is opened to the public during bank holidays.

The tower was erected in the four years between 1871 and 1875. The main shaft is octagonal in shape and it has a square base and 369 steps leading to the first of two viewing platforms which is open to the public, and a total of 405 to the top viewing platform (which is usually closed to the public).

History

One driving force behind the erection of the viewing platforms was a long-standing feud between landowning neighbours John Edward Wainhouse (1817–1883) and Sir Henry Edwards (1812–1886). Edwards had boasted that he had the most private estate in Halifax, into which no one could see. As the estate was on land adjacent to the chimney's site, following the opening of the viewing platforms, Edwards could never claim privacy again.

The tower was designed by architect Isaac Booth as a chimney to serve the dye works owned by Wainhouse. The height of the chimney was to satisfy the Smoke Abatement Act of 1870 which required a tall chimney to carry smoke out of the valleys in which the factories were built. A much simpler chimney would have satisfied the requirements but Wainhouse insisted that it should be an object of beauty.[3]

In 1874, John Wainhouse sold the mill to his works manager, who refused to pay the cost of the chimney's construction so Wainhouse kept the tower for himself and used it as an observatory. Booth left after a dispute and was replaced by another local architect, Richard Swarbrick Dugale, who is responsible for the elaborate galleries and the corona dome at the top. The tower was completed on 9 September 1875, at a cost of £14,000.

Restoration

In 2006, Wainhouse Tower was closed because of safety problems. Work to repair it began in July 2008 and took about five months. During the restoration, the top section of the tower was partly dismantled and rebuilt, decorative sections and part of the main shaft were repointed, missing stone finials replaced, the drainage system improved, corroded ironwork replaced and cracks at the base of the tower fixed.[4] The tower reopened to the general public on 4 May 2009. Restoration cost £400,000.

The Daily Telegraph included the tower on their top 15 list of "Britain's Best Architectural Follies".[5]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Wainhouse Tower)

References