
Ascog House | Collegehill
House | Culloden Tower | Manor
Farm | Whiteford Temple
Exterior and interior photos of Culloden
Tower
Culloden Tower, North Yorkshire
This tower was built in 1746 by John Yorke, MP for Richmond, to mark
the final establishment of Hanoverian rule. It stands in the park
of his long-demolished house,
at the edge of a steep slope above the River Swale, on the site of
an old pele tower. It was probably designed by Daniel Garrett, architect
of The Banqueting House.
Inside are to be found, one above the other, two tall octagonal rooms,
flooded with daylight and of the highest quality. The carving and
plaster work of the lower is in a
Gothic style, while that of the upper is Classical. Here you will
sleep under what must be our grandest bedroom ceiling, worth all the
60 steps you must climb to reach it.
Neglect and vandals had done a great deal of damage by the time we
bought the tower, but old photographs and salvaged fragments made
restoration possible. It is difficult to
imagine, certainly to find, a more romantic situation, looking over
the trees of this park with the sight and sound of the Swale hurrying
over its rocks and stones below; and with the particularly handsome
town of Richmond, which has an eighteenth century theatre and much
more besides, a few hundred yards away.
For up to 4 people
- Open fire
- Small fenced garden
- Roof platform
- Parking nearby
- Steep spiral staircase
- Dogs allowed
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