Monday, 25 November 2024

Radcliffe Tower, Near Bury, Lancashire - its History and Legends.

A few miles to the south of Bury, Lancashire, is the historic building known as Radcliffe Tower, which is located just to the east of the River Irwell, at Radcliffe. It was built way back in the early 15th century when it started its life as a timber-framed manor house (locally it was referred to as the hall); the tower being a defensive pele with very strong and thick walls in case of raiders from the North. A second tower was never built. However, the house itself was demolished in the last century after being in use for agricultural purposes before its eventual demise, leaving the tower behind, which had been in a semi ruinous state for some time, though the Ministry of Buildings and Works has been taking care of it for a long time now. The partly ruined Tower is now a local landmark, and, no doubt local people will know the 'Legend' and subsequent poem regarding 'Fair Ellen of Radcliffe' who died in the most horrid of circumstances at the old manor house with the wicked stepmother the culprit. There is also the legend of the ghostly 'Black Dog of Radcliffe Tower', which is now long forgotten, but was linked with the tragic Fair Ellen.
Pennine Magazine (1985) tells us that: "James de Radcliffe got a licence to build a timber hall with two stone towers in 1403. There's no evidence that the second tower was ever built and the hall disappeared last century, leaving the tower - 50ft by 28ft, with five 5ft thick wall - rising 20ft or so from the ground, which had a natural defence in the Irwell, in a loop of which it lies. The historian Whitaker noted that the hall had several interesting features when he visited it in 1781. The hall had gone by 1841, when Samuel Bamford noted the fine barrel-vaulted room at the base of the tower and wrote "unless it be protected from further wanton outrage it must soon share the fate of the hall". It wasn't and it has. But what remains is still impressive. Catholic families were imprisoned here by the Earl of Derby in 1592, for refusing to attend Church of England services.
"Like all good towers, Radcliffe has a legend attached - in this case a particularly good one. Like many other folk tales it involves a loving father, a beautiful daughter and a wicked stepmother - who'd be a stepmother with stories like Snow White, Hansel and Gretel etc? In true fairy-tale style, the daughter, Fair Ellen of Radcliffe, just had to go and the wicked stepmother persuaded the master cook to do her bidding in the dastardly deed. One day, when the tower was the centre of a hunting party and the ladies were out riding, Fair Ellen was sent back to the tower by her stepmother to tell the cook to get the meal ready and "kill the fair white doe." He would know what she meant, the stepmother explained. The cook seized a knife and told the girl that she was the "fair white doe". But the little scullion boy, seeing his intention, begged to be allowed to take her place. The cook refused and told the lad that if he spoke a word the same fate would befall him.
"The Lord of Radcliffe missed his daughter at the meal and was told by the stepmother that she had run away to become a nun. The cook served an enormous pie, but as the lord was about to cut it open, the scullion boy came in and told him what had happened, and that his daughter was inside. The Lord, having lost his only child, made the boy his heir for bravely offering to take Fair Ellen's place."
Sources and References:-
Colour Photo (top) Radcliffe Tower by David Dixon (Geograph). https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1687127
Pennine magazine, Vol. 4 No. 5 June/July 1983. Pennine Heritage (Pennine Development Ltd.,)The Birchcliffe Centre, Hebden Bridge, West Yorks.
Copyright © RayS57, 2024.