Chester Shot Tower

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Chester Shot Tower

Chester Shot Tower, also known as Boughton Shot Tower, is a grade-II*-listed shot tower in the Boughton district of Chester, the county town of Cheshire. The tower stands beside the Shropshire Union Canal and forms part of the disused Chester Leadworks.

Built by Walkers, Parker & Co. in 1799, the tower is the oldest of three remaining shot towers in the United Kingdom,[1][2] and probably the oldest such structure still standing in the world.

The circular red-brick tower is 168 feet tall and 30 feet in diameter at the base tapering to 20 feet at the top, with small arched windows.[1] A lift shaft dating from 1971 remains attached to the exterior; the interior retains a spiral staircase and melting pots.[3][4]

Drop process of lead shot manufacture

The tower was one of the earliest built to manufacture lead shot using the method pioneered in the 1780s by the Bristol inventor William Watts.[1] Molten lead was poured through a pierced copper plate or sieve at the top of the tower, with the droplets forming perfect spheres by surface tension during the fall; the spherical drops were then cooled in a vat of water at the base.[5] Watts' process was less labour-intensive than the earlier method of casting shot in moulds. An early use of the tower was to make lead shot for muskets in the Napoleonic Wars.[1] Although other methods were developed to manufacture shot during the 20th century, the Chester tower was still in use as late as 2001.[3]

Lead industry in Chester

Lead is believed to have been exported at the port of Chester from lead mines in Denbighshire since the Roman period; later sites included Minera Lead Mines.[6]

The construction of the Chester Canal in the 1770s led to industrial development to the east of Chester, with the Walkers, Parker & Co. leadworks being established there in the late 18th century.[6][7] The lead industry became one of Chester's major industries during the 19th century. An archaeological investigation carried out in 2001 found evidence of numerous demolished buildings contemporary with the shot tower of 1799;[3] by 1812, the leadworks is known to have also included pipe-drawing machines and a rolling mill for producing lead sheet.[7]

The leadworks closed in 2001, with Calder relocating to west Chester.[3] Most of the remaining buildings of the leadworks, with the exception of the shot tower, were demolished around 2004 to make way for urban regeneration of the canal-side area.[3] A small park by the canal on part of the former site was opened in May 2006.[6] The park contains a sculpture in stainless steel and blue glass which commemorates Chester's lead industry; 'Spheres of Reflection' by Edd Snell was inspired by lead drops impacting on the surface of water.[6]

Redevelopment plans

In April 2012 Broadway Malyan submitted plans for a £6.4 million redevelopment of the Shot Tower and associated leadworks to create 53 residential units as well as leisure and retail facilities.[8] The controversy over the plans featured in the February 2013 BBC2 TV documentary The Planners.

Other shot towers

The Chester Shot Tower is one of only three such structures to remain in the United Kingdom.[1][2] Although shot towers were very common during the 19th century across the country (two appear in the London skyline in John Constable's 1832 painting The Opening of Waterloo Bridge),[9] the Chester tower is the only surviving example that dates from the 18th or 19th centuries. Other early shot towers survive in the United States.

The other British examples still standing date from the 20th century:

  • The Cheese Lane Shot Tower in Bristol is a reinforced concrete tower built in 1969 to replace Watts' original shot tower in Redcliffe.[2]
  • A military look-out post in Tynemouth dating from 1916 is also believed to have doubled as a shot tower.[10]
  • The so-called Crane Park Shot Tower at Twickenham is no longer thought to have been used for this purpose.[11]

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