Eston Nab

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
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    License code: BHAHK2NQDUTZTYOV Eston Nab is a rocky outcrop hill in the town of Eston, Redcar and Cleveland, North Yorkshire, England.
    A nab is a rocky promontory, and Eston Nab, marking the highest point - at 242 metres (794 ft) - on the escarpment which forms Eston Hills, appears as a clear sandstone cliff on the northernmost edge of Eston Moor. It overlooks the town of Eston, which is part of Redcar and Cleveland, and can be seen from beyond Hartlepool on the northern side of Tees Bay.
    It is the site of Bronze Age burial mounds and an Iron Age hill fort. However, regardless of all its history, to local people, the name of Eston Nab is synonymous with the monument that stands there. When families went out for a walk together the monument at Eston Nab was the destination of choice.
    Historical site
    Diagram showing the site of the Iron Age hillfort at Eston Nab
    Remains from the Bronze Age have been found, such as flint arrowheads, possibly date back to between 6000 and 4000 BC.
    Frank Elgee, curator of the Dorman Museum, Middlesbrough, in 1927, uncovered parts of an earthenware cremation urn, together with burnt bone and flint. These possibly dated from 1800 BC.
    There was a substantial Iron Age hill fort at Eston Nab. Boulder walls and ditches are still visible even though they were built in around 700 BC.
    Eston Hills, of which it is the highest point, had a warren of cavernous tunnels carved into them, to create the ironstone mines that closed in 1949. They formed the original basis for the iron and steel industry on the River Tees and the building of Middlesbrough. Eston Nab featured in the film, A Century in Stone, a film about the Eston mines. The monument was shown as it was in the early 19th century.
    In early 2014, for the sum of £15,000, Eston Nab was purchased from its private owner by a voluntary organisation known as the 'Friends of Eston Hills'. A co-founder of the organisation was Craig Hornby, a local film-maker whose best-known work, A Century in Stone, tells the story of iron-stone mining in Eston Hills. The property acquired includes land around the area of the monument, between the privately owned Bauer Teesside site and Eston Moor, which is already in public hands
    The monument is in the form of a pillar made of sandstone bricks. It was originally built as a lookout tower and beacon to warn of invasion during the Napoleonic Wars in the early 19th century. With the advent of ironstone mining in Eston Hills, the beacon was used as a house and survived until 1956. It was then demolished and later rebuilt into its present form.
    A plaque on the side of the monument reads:
    This monument is placed here to mark the
    site of the beacon tower which was erected
    by Thomas Jackson of Lackenby about 1800 as
    a look-out post against invasion during the
    Napoleonic wars and which again served the same
    purpose in the second world war of 1939-1945.
    It stands within a Bronze Age fortified
    camp whose outer defences can be seen

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