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Phoenix Tower

A Virtual Stroll Around the Walls of Chester

4. The Kaleyard Gate



Kaleyard Gate II

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A brief introduction to Chester / 2

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The North Wall
The Phoenix Tower
The Kaleyard Gate
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Chester's visitors through time
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The Chester Canal / 2 / 3
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After leaving the Phoenix Tower behind
, we turn the corner and head southward along the East Wall which, from here to the Newgate continues to follow the original Roman course.
Beyond the trees on our left, notice how the Shropshire Union Canal leaves the shelter of the walls and continues on its way towards the pleasant suburb of Hoole (where these words are being written) and on into rural Cheshire.
kaleyard stepsThe opening of this stretch of canal was recorded in the long-defunct local newspaper, the Chester Courant, of Tuesday, 27th December 1774 as follows: "Near Cow Lane Bridge (which you should be able to see to your right from the wall) was launched a large barge, called Egerton, 70 feet long, 14 feet wide and 70 tons burthen. Immediately after, she proceeded, full of people with french horns etc playing on board, under the walls of the city, along by the Phoenix Tower, thro' the rock that has been cut open at the Northgate, to the dam at the end of the canal now finished, being about 200 yards to the westwards of Northgate, where several cannon were fired. From thence she was conducted thro' six bridges and five locks now erected on the Christleton quarry; and afterwards was re-conducted to Cow Lane Bridge".

This bridge was rebuilt and enlarged in the 1960s with the coming of the Inner Ringroad, and the Slow Boat Chinese restaurant and shop development next to it- on a site formerly occupied by a timber yard and wharf- appeared at this time also.
(This remarkable aerial view- a detail from John McGahey's famous View of Chester from a Balloon- shows the old Cow Lane Bridge and its surroundings as they appeared around 1855).

In earlier times, the spot where it now stands was occupied by one of a series of outlying defensive gates, known as the Cow Gate, which was removed after suffering serious damage during the Siege of Chester in the Civil War.

On our left, some wooden steps, loosely modelled on Roman originals, take us, via a curious selection of old carved stones set in a wooded area, down to the canal bank. The towpath hereabouts has recently undergone a long-overdue programme of restoration and resurfacing and is very much more pleasant to stroll along than it once was. Trees have been pruned and new lighting added. You should definitely, time allowing, take the short stroll from here to examine the city walls from the bottom of their ancient defensive ditch, then pass under the Northgate to Tower Wharf- which we will be visiting towards the end of our Virtual Stroll.
(Some interesting photographs of Chester's canal as it appeared during the 1950s and 60s may be seen here and you can learn more about the canal a little further on, in the direcion of Hoole and Boughton here)
In May 2003, the aforementioned curious- and rather attractive- old stones were removed by the city council to prevent 'undesirables' from sitting on them. That perfectly ordinary citizens also enjoyed using them for a picnic or a bit of a breather didn't seem to count for much in the decision.

On 25th July 1828, during a violent rainstorm, some 15 yards of of this stretch of wall fell down into a ropewalk below and had to be rebuilt (in a different style- the repaired section is clearly visible) This seems to have removed all traces of the 13th century Sadler's Tower, the base of which survived here (as still does that of the Drum Tower, which we will encounter later) when the rest of the tower was demolished fifty years earlier.
However, John Seacome's Chester Guide, published around 1828, tells us that, "The Sadler's Tower was taken down in 1780; and the abutment, being the occasion of a great nuisance to the residence of Griffith Rowlands esquire immediately opposite, from the number of idle and disorderly characters who were in the habit of congregating there of an evening, that gentleman obtained permission from the Corporation to take it down and continue the wall at his own expense, in February 1828". Griffith Rowlands was a surgeon who practised in Chester and who died in May 1828, a few months after obtaining permission to remove the remains of the tower adjoining his property and before the work was actually completed.

cottage in KaleyardsActually, the foundations of the old Sadler's Tower are said to lie beneath the gardens of the attractive brick cottage we see on the left. Built in the early 19th century, it is the sole survivor of a group of similar houses which formerly stood here and which may just be seen in the McGahey picture mentioned above. Originally occupied by a stonemason employed in the adjoining works next to the canal, it has since been used for a number of diverse purposes, including cafe, massage parlour- and, until recently, as a fine contemporary art gallery. But, at the time of writing, the premises were once again for sale.

Because of the softness of Chester sandstone- and doubtless also the destructive effects of warfare- the walls have had to be repaired and rebuilt at frequent intervals. Major work was carried out at the end of the 13th and early 14th centuries and again in 1555-6, when female labour was extensively utilised.
In 1562, a contract for maintaining the walls was awarded, by which a mason called Thomas Wosewall and Thomas his son "Obliged themselves duringe their lives, in all things belonging to a Mason's worke, substantially to make, repaire, maintaine, and uphold, all the walls of the city, finding all manner stuffe, as stone, lime, sand and water, and also iron and steele for sharpening their tools and instruments, and also two labourers att such tymes as they shall sett and none otherwise in consideracion of an annual fee of fourty shillings and a livery gown".
The walls evidently decayed faster than the two Thomas' could work, for twenty eight years later, in 1590, when the son surrendered the contract, it was found once again "That the walles are ruynous and gretelie decayed".
By 1982, the inside face of the wall immediately north of the Kaleyard Gate, which had been leaning for many years, became increasingly in danger of collapse and radical repairs had to be undertaken, involving the excavation of the loose core material and the tying together of the two skins of stonework with stainless steel rods. As well as ensuring the stability of the ancient structure for centuries to come, it gave archaeologists a rare opportunity to investigate and record details of the foundations and internal structure of this section of the Roman wall. During reconstruction, all of the masonry was replaced exactly in its original position.

Romans and Archers
archer marks in city wallLarge sections of Roman masonry can be seen at numerous locations along the outside of the wall here- massive stones five or six feet long and belonging to the period of the reconstruction of the fortress under the Emperor Trajan around AD105. When this work was finished, the courses we see were situated half way up the wall; over the centuries the higher courses were lost- often removed for use elsewhere- and the lower became buried as the ground level rose.
The 18th century authors of the Chester Directory, Barfoot and Wilkes, explained,

"Before the present pavements were laid, all the ashes, soil, building rubbish and other adventitious matter, being suffered to remain in the streets, might occasion their present elevation". Things however might have been worse, for they add: "The very great benefit which the farmers find in laying the manure collected in the streets upon the land, has been the means of keeping great towns cleaner than they were formerly".

The foundations of barrack blocks and other Roman buildings similarly lie buried beneath the beautiful Deanery Field, to our right.

On the outer face of the great stones standing out from the base of the east wall, you may come across a number of weathered vertical and diagonal grooves, as illustrated in our photograph. Some of these are archer marks, which were worn into the soft stone by medieval bowmen sharpening their arrows before the practice sessions which were compulsory in earlier times for all males above the age of six years old, and held on the meadows immediately outside the walls at this point. These marks are particularly clear a little further along, etched into the massive Roman stones next to the steps opposite the Cathedral.
English- and Welsh- archers were the most formidable fighting men of the middle ages, and the men of Cheshire were famous for their skills with the cloth-yard arrow and the bow of yew wood, one of the deadliest weapons of the day. Richard II's bodyguard comprised "2000 Cheshire archers" and they played a decisive part at the battles of Agincourt and Poitiers.
At a National Archaeology Day event, held in July 1998 at an exciting long-term excavation of a long-lost chapel and Cistercian abbey (and now Neolithic and Roman features!)- at Poulton near Chester, we learned from members of the Welsh medieval re-enactment group Samhain that the majority of these archers actually used bows made from shade-grown elm wood. English yew, because of the climate, tended to grow unevenly and was generally unsuitable for the purpose. That yew which was used had to be imported from Europe and was subsequently very expensive.
(After our conversation, we also got the chance to try out these powerful weapons for ourselves!)

"The bows used by them are not made of horn or ivory or yew, but of wild elm, unpolished, rude and uncouth, but stout;
not only calculated to shoot an arrow a great distance but also to inflict very severe wounds in close fight"
Giraldus Cambrensis c. 1207

Mwy na un bwa y'w y Nghaer
"More than one yew bow in Chester" (Old Welsh proverb)

civil war recreation on deanery fieldAs we move on, we continue to skirt the beautiful Deanery Field on our right. Thomas Hughes, writing in 1876, remarked that "a sight pleasant to the eye is that verdant mead, in olden time known as the Green of the Walls". Never heard today, an older name for this area was the Laudamus Field. This would appear to have been derived from Te Deum Laudamus, an ancient Christian hymn, but the reason for the field being so called is unknown.
Here, on a summer evening, one may sometimes see a cricket match in progress, and occasional special events are held here, such as the Civil War Society's superb recreation of life in 17th century Chester, part of the city's Divided Loyalties festival in 1994 (shown in the photograph on the right) and, in the summer of 2007, as illustrated below, the occupation of the area by an army of Vikings!
Beyond the Deanery Field you can see the elegant terrace of Georgian houses in Abbey Green and the towers of the Cathedral and Town Hall, as well as the blue (until recently red) neon sign of the elegant Odeon Cinema in Northgate Street- a view that to this day continues to be truly "pleasant to the eye".

Consider the Ravens
In 1996, for the first time in centuries, ravens returned to Chester, a pair nesting high up on the tower of Chester's Town Hall, where they successfully raised three young.
These impressive birds, standing 25 inches high with a four-foot wingspan, are the UK's only known town-nesting ravens, aside from their famous brethren at the Tower of London.
Traditionally, ravens became symbolic of Britain as a powerful country. Should they ever fly away, it was said, the monarch would fall and the nation crumble. The Tower's ravens, therefore, have their wings clipped to prevent them from flying away! By contrast, Chester's are the real, wild, thing.

When a raven shall build in a stone lion's mouth,
On a church top beside the grey forest:
Then shall a King of England be drove from his crown
And return no more

Robert Nixon, the Cheshire Prophet

These noble birds may be often seen flying over this stretch of wall or collecting nesting materials in the trees nearby. Witnesses have spotted them swooping upon pigeons in mid-air and returning to the nest with their prize.
Although once common throughout Britain, persecution during the middle ages resulted in their dramatic decline and there are now only around 7000 breeding pairs left in the country.
Ravens are associated with battlefields, where they fed upon the flesh of those killed and maimed in war.The cawing of ravens therefore became synonymous with death and destruction and they were consequently considered unwelcome visitors in towns.

In preparation for their return to the Town Hall in 1997, a video camera was erected on the tower connected to a monitor in the tourist information office far below. However, the Ravens chose instead to build their nest on the tower of the Cathedral- necessitating a hurried relocation of the camera- and where two chicks were successfully raised.
The following year, 1998, the pair, evidently trying to keep the observers on their toes, constructed nests in both locations, before eventually selecting the Town Hall tower, where a batch of six eggs was laid, five of which hatched. Tragically, in early April an engineer installing a video camera reported that the entire brood had died and the parents had disappeared.
A local ornithologist, Dale Miles, commented about the death of the chicks, "It is a classic case of birds abandoning the nest because of a predator, in this case workmen installing the cameras. The council have been very amateurish. They are meant to be experts". The council, predictably, denied all.
However, in February 1999, the pair returned to the Cathedral, successfully raising three young, and at the time of writing, February 2000, they are here again and have built their nest on a gargoyle on the Cathedral's central tower. It would appear that this man-made 'sandstone cliff' has become the noble raven's permanent home.

Now go on to Part II of our exploration of the Kaleyards Gate area...


Curiousities from Chester's History no. 5

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