Benchmark & 1GL Bolt - Bath Abbey - Bath, Somerset
Posted by: SMacB
N 51° 22.899 W 002° 21.526
30U E 544625 N 5692462
A cut benchmark & 1GL bolt on the north face of Bath Abbey north trancept.
Waymark Code: WMWKVA
Location: South West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 09/16/2017
Views: 2
A cut benchmark & 1GL bolt on the north face of Bath Abbey north trancept.
Square |
Easting |
Northing |
Mark type |
Description |
Height |
Order |
Datum |
Verified year |
Levelling year |
Metres above ground |
ST |
7513 |
6479 |
CUT MARK |
ABBEY NE ANG BUTT TWR N FACE |
25.320 |
3 |
'N' |
1960 |
1956 |
1.000 |
"This bench mark was used during the First primary levelling, England & Wales, and was levelled with a height of 83.5930 feet [25.4791 metres] above mean sea level (Liverpool datum). It was included on the Gloucester to London levelling line. The surveyor's description was No. 177. Bolt in East side of the Abbey Church ; 3.31 ft. above surface"
SOURCE - (Visit Link)
"The Abbey Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Bath, commonly known as Bath Abbey, is an Anglican parish church and a former Benedictine monastery in Bath, Somerset, England. Founded in the 7th century, Bath Abbey was reorganised in the 10th century and rebuilt in the 12th and 16th centuries; major restoration work was carried out by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the 1860s. It is one of the largest examples of Perpendicular Gothic architecture in the West Country.
The church is cruciform in plan, and able to seat 1200. An active place of worship, it also hosts secular civic ceremonies, concerts and lectures. Its congregation numbers in the hundreds, and annual visitors in the hundreds of thousands. The choir performs in the abbey and elsewhere. There is a heritage museum in the vaults.
The abbey is a Grade I listed building, particularly noted for its fan vaulting. It contains war memorials for the local population and monuments to several notable people, in the form of wall and floor plaques and commemorative stained glass. The church has two organs and a peal of ten bells. The west front includes sculptures of angels climbing to heaven on two stone ladders."
SOURCE - (Visit Link)