Just outside Little Berkhamsted in Hertfordshire stands a lofty circular brick tower which sits on an octagonal base. It was built towards the end of the eighteenth century by the Stratton family and has, appropriately, a tall tale attached. The eye-catcher was a popular subject with artists, and a number of very pretty views survive.
Barbara Jones described the tower in Follies and Grottoes (1953) as the creation of one Admiral Stratton who wished to see the ships on the Thames: a story which had been told in print since at least 1888 (a variant story has the builder as a wealthy ship owner). As there is no possibility of seeing the Thames from the top of the tower, Jones concluded that this part of the story might be fanciful. In fact little of the tale was true, and there never was an Admiral Stratton.
In 1790 the house called Gays (sometimes The Gaze, but now The Gage) was home to John Stratton (c.1751-1811) who is said to have built the tower in 1789. He was the son of a wealthy merchant and although he was apprenticed to a London attorney in 1787, he later seems to have enjoyed life as a gentleman of independent means. Little is known about Stratton’s life. He was living in ‘Little Berkhamstead’ when he married Charlotte Lucadon in a Church of England ceremony in 1794, but he died in Bromley, Kent, in April 1811 and was buried in the nonconformist cemetery at Bunhill Fields in London.
The tower was built using bricks recycled from an earlier building which stood on the site, and in 1890 it was reported that the building cost was £3,000. Information on the date and cost seems to have been supplied by Col. John Heathfield Stratton (1837-1925), who lived at The Gage at the turn of the nineteenth century and presumably had family papers in his possession. Sadly no designer or architect’s name is ever mentioned.
A drawing in Hertfordshire Archives & Local Studies (above), executed some time before 1805, is annotated with a description of the tower. It tells that it was built ‘for a pleasure house, and has several apartments in the different stages of altitude’. The Strattons and their guests could admire the ‘fine prospects’ from the ‘flat lead roof’ behind the battlements.
Although marked on the 1856 1st series Ordnance Survey map as ‘Observatory’, at some point early in its existence the tower was given the alternative name of ‘The Monument’, and it is marked as such on the 1838 tithe map and on later Ordnance Survey maps. In 1830 there was a steeplechase to ‘the monument in Little Berkhamstead’ and the name was also used on early picture postcards. There is no explanation for the name or what the tower might commemorate.
The tower was maintained until the middle of the nineteenth century. The key was held locally and visitors were permitted to climb the tower (except on Sundays). We know there was a library on the second floor because one George Shepherd was caught stealing books from the tower in 1868. In court he confessed, admitting he planned to sell the books to ‘buy myself some bread, because I was hungry’.
By 1888 the tower was described as dilapidated. The decaying tower stayed in Stratton family ownership until the middle of the last century, and in the 1960s the then owner, architect William Tatton Brown (1910-1977), tried to get planning permission to convert the tower for residential use and save it from further decay. After a battle with Hertford Rural Council he eventually got the go-ahead, but not before one particular aspect of the case had been enjoyed by the press. In 1968 Sir Ian Orr-Ewing, Member of Parliament for Hendon North (Conservative), objected to the application stating that he sometimes sunbathed naked in his garden and did not wish to be overlooked.
A further extension has since been added to the base of the tower (listed grade II*) and it remains a private residence. The top of the tower can be seen from roads and footpaths within the village, which is understandably proud of the grade II* listed folly.
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TOM GARDNER says:
GREETINGS,
YOUR LATEST OFFERING WAS TRULY GREAT; ON SEVERAL LEVELS.
THE STATS, – THE PICTURES, BUT … THAT ONE LAST COMMENT, RE. ‘SIR’ IAN,
AND HIS – ‘AU NATURAL’ OUTDOOR …’ EXPOSURE’ – WAS JUST THE PERFECT ENDING.
HAVING IN MY FAMILY BLOOD LINE: ENGLISH, SCOT AND IRISH FOREBEARS – PERHAPS
THAT IS WHY I AM SO FOND OF THESE STRUCTURES, AND THEIR SURVIVAL.
MANY THANKS.
TOM
Editor says:
Good morning Tom. The watercolours are beautiful, I was so pleased to find them all. And of course it is always fun to tell the quirkier tales associated with follies!
TOM GARDNER says:
MORNING, (LABOR DAY WEEKED -USA)
AS IT HAPPENS, I ALONG WITH MY PARTNER – SHELDON, LIVE IN A NYC ‘TOWNHOUSE’ …
THAT PRIOR TO WW II – WAS A SINGULAR FAMILY DWELLING; NOW HOUSES TEN APTS.
WE HAVE THE STUDIO, FORMERLY THE LIBRARY. WHEN PRIVATE, THE OWNER WAS A CLOSE FRIEND & NEIGHBOR OF: PRES. FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT. BOTH SHARED A PASSION FOR SHIP MODELS. IN THE FORMER LIBRARY, NOW OUR APT.- BOTH MEN SPENT HOURS
SHARING STORIES AND GOOD SCOTCH. OH TO HAVE BEEN: ‘A FLY ON THOSE WALLS.’ YOUR ‘HISTORY’ – TID-BITS, TO YOUR STRUCTURES, IS ALWAYS AN ENRICHING GIFT.
MANY THANKS,
TOM