place

Layer Marney Tower

1520 establishments in EnglandBorough of ColchesterBrick GothicCountry houses in EssexGardens in Essex
Gothic architecture in EnglandGrade II listed parks and gardens in EssexGrade I listed buildings in EssexGrade I listed gatesHistoric house museums in EssexHouses completed in 1520Tudor architectureUse British English from February 2023
Layer Marney gatehouse 03
Layer Marney gatehouse 03

Layer Marney Tower is an incomplete early Tudor country house, with gardens and parkland, dating from about 1523, in Layer Marney, Essex, England, between Colchester and Maldon. The building was designated Grade I listed in 1952. The large gatehouse tower is much the most striking element to be completed and to survive. Constructed in the first half of the reign of Henry VIII, Layer Marney Tower is in many ways the apotheosis of the Tudor gatehouse, and is the tallest example in Britain. It is contemporaneous with East Barsham Manor in Norfolk and Sutton Place, Surrey, with which latter building it shares the rare combination of brick and terracotta construction. The building is principally the creation of Henry 1st Lord Marney, who died in 1523, and his son John, who continued the building work but died just two years later, leaving no male heirs to continue the family line or the construction. What was completed was the main range measuring some three hundred feet long, the principal gatehouse that is about eighty feet tall, an array of outbuildings, and a new church.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Layer Marney Tower (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Layer Marney Tower
Roundbush Road, Colchester Layer Marney

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Layer Marney TowerContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.8225 ° E 0.79666666666667 °
placeShow on map

Address

Layer Marney Tower

Roundbush Road
CO5 9UR Colchester, Layer Marney
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q1809395)
linkOpenStreetMap (143333975)

Layer Marney gatehouse 03
Layer Marney gatehouse 03
Share experience

Nearby Places

Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway

The Kelvedon and Tollesbury Light Railway was a locally promoted railway company, intended to open up an agricultural district that suffered from poor transport links. The enactment of the Light Railways Act 1896 encouraged the promoters to persuade the dominant main line railway, the Great Eastern Railway (GER), to participate in the construction and operation of the line. The line opened from Kelvedon to Tollesbury in 1904. At Kelvedon it had its own station close to the GER main line station. All the stations had minimal buildings—in most cases old coach or bus bodies served as waiting rooms, and the passenger rolling stock consisted of conversions of old vehicles. Passenger business was never dominant, but the area around Tiptree experienced major growth in the culture of soft fruit and of jams. The GER took over the original company, and built an extension to Tollesbury Pier on the River Blackwater estuary; this opened in 1907. It was hoped that this would lead to numerous commercial possibilities: the development of housing and of yachting facilities in addition to the increased use of the pier as a transport terminal, but these developments never materialised, and the pier extension railway closed in 1921. The entire line closed to passenger traffic in 1951, and the goods activity was truncated to serve the Studwick Road (Tiptree) siding only, for the jam factory. That too closed in 1962, and there is now no railway activity on the former line.