Severndroog Castle

Severndroog Castle is a folly (designed by architect Richard Jupp in 1784) situated on Shooter's Hill in south-east London in the London Borough of Greenwich. It was built to commemorate Commodore Sir William James who, in April 1755, attacked and destroyed a pirate fortress at Severndroog along the Bombay and Goa coast of India. He died in 1783 and the castle was built as a memorial to him by his wife, Lady James of Eltham. A Grade II listed building, the Gothic-style castle is 63 feet (19 m) high and triangular in section, with a hexagonal turret at each corner. From its elevated position, it offers views across London, with features in seven different counties visible on a clear day. In 1988, the local council could no longer afford the building's upkeep and it was boarded up. In 2002, a community group, the Severndroog Castle Building Preservation Trust, was established. In 2004, it featured in the BBC series Restoration - with the aim of gaining support for a programme of work to restore the building and open it to the public.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
mike ward
national assessment agency
chinese mantis
list of people by name: rob
royal automobile club of australia
harrie skinner
katherine rich
list of people by name: roc ror
retesh bhalla
nrma
imperial service club
list of raca presidents
list of people by name: rot roz
european mantis
1977
bhoot bangla
holger brner
tritos
dukes of masovia
homarus
jingjiang princes city
turbellaria
list of harmonic analysis and representation theory topics
galactic conquest
battle of honkaniemi
velvia
crazy english
snooker world rankings
nazi soviet population transfers
michael appleby
te anau
british columbia provincial highway 99a
william joynson hicks, 1st viscount brentford
and you are lynching negroes
michael appleby (new zealand)
crist
first class object
william james (naval commander)
european lobster
aotearoa legalise cannabis party
no. 1321 flight raf
unity list
norwegian constitution day
comet (disambiguation)