Jubilee Tower

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jubilee_Tower an entity of type: Thing

The octagonal Jubilee Tower (officially called Darwen Tower) at grid reference SD678215 on Darwen Hill overlooking the town of Darwen in Lancashire, England, was completed in 1898 to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee and also to celebrate the victory of the local people for the right to access the moor. It was opened to the public on 24 September 1898. The architect was R. W. Smith-Saville and he modified the plans for the tower slightly. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jubilee Tower
rdf:langString Darwen Tower
rdf:langString Darwen Tower
xsd:float 53.68964004516602
xsd:float -2.48799991607666
xsd:integer 5274399
xsd:integer 1094060199
rdf:langString Darwen Hill
rdf:langString England
rdf:langString United Kingdom Blackburn with Darwen
xsd:date 1898-09-24
xsd:string 53.68963888888889 -2.488
rdf:langString The octagonal Jubilee Tower (officially called Darwen Tower) at grid reference SD678215 on Darwen Hill overlooking the town of Darwen in Lancashire, England, was completed in 1898 to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee and also to celebrate the victory of the local people for the right to access the moor. It was opened to the public on 24 September 1898. The architect was R. W. Smith-Saville and he modified the plans for the tower slightly. The tower is 85 feet (25.9 m) in height, while Darwen Hill is 1,220 feet (372 metres) above sea-level. Walkers can climb to the top of the tower via the internal staircase to see views of North Yorkshire, Morecambe Bay, Blackpool Tower, Cumbria, the Isle of Man, North Wales, Derbyshire, elsewhere in Lancashire, and surrounding moorland.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6507
xsd:double 25.908
xsd:date 1898-09-24
<Geometry> POINT(-2.4879999160767 53.689640045166)

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