The monument, which is located 700 metres to the north west of Burton Pynsent House, is also known as the Cider Monument; Parkfield Monument; Burton Steeple or Tower; Pynsent Steeple, Column or Tower. It was built mainly with local stone but was faced with Portland stone. It was restored in the 1990s by the John Paul Getty Trust and English Heritage.
There is a possibly apocryphal story about a cow who walked up the stairs on the inside of the tower three times. On the first two occasions she was coaxed back down but on the third occasion she fell off the viewing platform and was killed. Another version of the story says that the cow only ascended the tower once but it proved impossible to turn her round at the top, so she was killed and decapitated, so she could be brought down in pieces.
Grid reference: ST 376 252
Burton Pynsent Monument overlooking West Sedgemoor
Burton Pynsent Monument
Looking upwards
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