Latitude: 50.2334 / 50°14'0"N
Longitude: -5.2277 / 5°13'39"W
OS Eastings: 169915
OS Northings: 42029
OS Grid: SW699420
Mapcode National: GBR Z3.DHVG
Mapcode Global: VH12K.BDPF
Plus Code: 9C2P6QMC+9W
Entry Name: Clock Tower
Listing Date: 12 September 1989
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1253301
English Heritage Legacy ID: 436475
ID on this website: 101253301
Location: Redruth, Cornwall, TR15
County: Cornwall
Civil Parish: Redruth
Built-Up Area: Redruth
Traditional County: Cornwall
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Cornwall
Church of England Parish: Redruth
Church of England Diocese: Truro
Tagged with: Clock tower
This list entry was subject to a Minor Enhancement on 21 July 2022 to update the name and address, amend the description and to reformat the text to current standards
SW 64 SE
11/273
REDRUTH
FORE STREET (south side)
Clock Tower
GV
II
Clock tower and lock-up. 1828, altered 1836, rebuilt and raised 1900. Granite ashlar. Square in plan. Now four stages; the ground floor has diagonal buttresses and a large two-centred arched doorway with chamfered surround and hoodmould; each succeeding stage is slightly set back above a weathered band; the second stage has a two-centred arched window with hoodmould; the third stage has coupled round-headed lancets under a hoodmould, and newer masonry beginning above this; the tall fourth stage has smaller coupled lancets under a hoodmould, a large clock face above this, and slightly over-sailing embattled parapet above a band; a weather vane is mounted on the roof. The lower half of the left-hand side and rear are covered by adjoining buildings, otherwise all other sides resemble the front.
HISTORY: built in 1828 to replace an earlier clock tower, altered 1836, raised in1900 by one storey and the original top placed above the new section. It is said that Trounson’s store, which had been built in 1869 and extended in 1890, had blocked the view of the clock for miners living in the East End part of the town; the raised clock tower meant that the miners could see the time. A lock-up existed under the clock from 1841-51. The open arches at ground level were closed-in for use as police cells in 1841, and this lock-up existed until 1851; the doorways beneath the clock tower are surviving but one is blocked. Pevsner observed that the clock tower ‘was like a Cornish version of Palazzo Vecchio tower’.
Listing NGR: SW6991542029
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