White Nancy

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White Nancy

Cheshire

WhiteNancy.JPG
White Nancy
Type: Folly tower
Location
Grid reference: SJ939771
Location: 53°17’27"N, 2°5’32"W
Village: Bollington
History
Built 1815
For: the Gaskell family
Folly tower
Information

White Nancy is a short, conical tower standing at the top of Kerridge Hill, overlooking Bollington in Cheshire, built in 1817 by John Gaskell to commemorate the victory at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

The tower is a Grade II listed building.[1] Its profile forms the logo for the town of Bollington, as the monument can be seen from almost everywhere across Bollington, and has become a much-loved symbol of the town.

History

White Nancy was built in 1817 to commemorate the victory at the Battle of Waterloo.[2] It was commissioned by by John Gaskell Junior, of North End Farm, a member of the Gaskell family who lived nearby at Ingersley Hall.[3]

The tower originally had an entrance to a single room which was furnished with stone benches and a central round stone table, but the entrance is now blocked. It has been described as a summer house or a folly.[2] Locals supposedly told 1940s Army signallers working on Kerridge Hill that the landmark was named after the lead horse that had transported all materials for the building of White Nancy.[4]

Description

The structure is circular in plan with its shape described as that of a sugar loaf, and is surmounted with a ball finial. It is built in sandstone rubble which has been rendered and painted.[2] It is about 18 feet high. Stone paving has been laid around its base which is inscribed with the points of the compass.[3]

Painting

Until at least 1925 the structure was unpainted.[5] It has been painted in a number of different colours over the years, most commonly in white.[3] In 2005 vandals painted it partly in pink.[6] In March 2009 it was repainted in white with the ball finial in black.[3] In 2012 a Jubilee crown and the dates 1952–2012 were added to the north-west face and Olympic rings added to the south-east face. The green ring is in the form of a laurel wreath encircling a gold medal and the number 29 which was added later to mark Team GB's 29 gold medals. It has also been painted with a large red remembrance poppy[7] and during the 1980s it was commonly painted at Christmas, decorated as a Christmas pudding or Father Christmas.

In 2015, in recognition of the reason for its construction, the structure was painted with a '200th Anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo' motif, and the silhouettes of soldiers in traditional military uniform from the time.[8] In May 2016 it was returned to its traditional all white with a black finial.

In May 2017, by request of the mayor of Bollington, a bee symbol was painted onto the monument to express solidarity with the people of Manchester after the Manchester Arena bombing.[9]

Visitor attraction

White Nancy painted with a poppy in 2014

White Nancy provides a focus on the ridge of Kerridge Hill and from it there are extensive views across the Cheshire Plain towards the mountains of Snowdonia to the west, the hills of Shropshire to the south and the Pennines to the north and east.

White Nancy and the Kerridge ridge are on the route of the Gritstone Trail.[10] The Peak District Boundary Walk also runs past the monument.[11]

White Nancy has been acclaimed and has featured in countdowns of the best British follies identified by The Telegraph[12][13] and by Alan Titchmarsh.[14]

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about White Nancy)

References

  1. National Heritage List 1138973: White Nancy (Grade II listing)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 National Monuments Record: No. 1314829 – White Nancy
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Boddington, Tim, White Nancy, https://happyvalley.org.uk/?page_id=861, retrieved 7 February 2018 
  4. Oral history, serving soldier 1947–49 
  5. White Nancy, The Kerridge Ridge and Ingersley Vale Countryside and Heritage Project, http://www.kriv.org.uk/gallery/archive/whitenancycol.html, retrieved 10 September 2009 
  6. Hird, Gavin (7 September 2005), "Nancy’s in the pink!", Macclesfield Express (M.E.N. Media), http://www.macclesfield-express.co.uk/news/s/503/503707_nancys_in_the_pink.html, retrieved 10 September 2009 
  7. "Pictures: Silent tribute as Macclesfield marks Remembrance Sunday", Macclesfield Express, Nov 15, 2011, http://www.macclesfield-express.co.uk/news/local-news/pictures-silent-tribute-macclesfield-marks-2528520, retrieved 8 November 2014 
  8. Britton, Karen (7 May 2015), "Landmark gets latest makeover to mark 200th anniversary of Battle of Waterloo", Macclesfield Express, http://www.macclesfield-express.co.uk/news/landmark-gets-latest-makeover-mark-9199218, retrieved 1 June 2017 
  9. Greer, Stuart (29 May 2017), "Macclesfield stands in solidarity with Manchester in wake of horrific attack", Macclesfield Express, http://www.macclesfield-express.co.uk/news/macclesfield-stands-solidarity-manchester-wake-13108449, retrieved 1 June 2017 
  10. The Gritstone Trail: Disley to Tegg's Nose Country Park, Cheshire West and Chester Council, http://www.cheshire.gov.uk/countryside/Walking/linear_trails/gritstone/disley_teggs_nose.htm, retrieved 10 September 2009 
  11. McCloy, Andrew (2017). Peak District Boundary Walk: 190 Miles Around the Edge of the National Park. Friends of the Peak District. ISBN 978-1909461536. 
  12. Bloxham, Andy (27 December 2011), "Britain's follies: a list of some of the best", The Telegraph, https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/architecture/8975839/Britains-follies-a-list-of-some-of-the-best.html, retrieved 14 July 2015 
  13. "Britain's best architectural follies: White Nancy", The Telegraph, https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/pictures/8975453/Britains-best-architectural-follies.html?image=9, retrieved 1 June 2017 
  14. Titchmarsh, Alan, "Alan Titchmarsh's top British follies: White Nancy", The Telegraph, https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/period-property/10344286/Alan-Titchmarshs-top-British-follies.html, retrieved 1 June 2017