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Beeston Castle and Buried Treasure?

by moondust234 on 21/05/09 at 1:57 am

A legend attached to a castle in the county of Cheshire.

The gatehouse of Beeston Castle. Photo by Gary Tacagni

Beeston castle was built by Ranulf the Earl of Chester in 1220, it has two circuits of walls, the inner wall has an impressive gate house. In 1237 the castle was used by Henry third as a prison during his war with Wales.

The views from the castle are exceptional and it is said that on a clear day you can see eight counties stretching from the Pennines to the Welsh mountains.

eight counties can be seen on a clear day. Photo by Gary Tacagni.

In the past the castle was captured by Sir William Brereton who commanded the Parliamentarian forces in 1643 and began to rebuild its defenses. Beeston castle became a supply base for the Parliamentarians as the fighting had moved elsewhere. It was garrisoned by second class troops led by a Captain Thomas Steele, an ex cheese dealer from Chester!

The Royalists recaptured the castle in 1644, they added timber buildings to house cattle and sheep and widened the medieval arrow slits for the use of muskets.

Photo by Gary Tacagni.

In November 1644 the Parliamentarians laid seige to the castle and they built an earthen fort within musket range of the outer gatehouse, and a continuous ditch was cut around the bottom of the crag. The seige now became very much a stand off, the Royalists were finding things difficult as supplies were running low. However the Parliamentarian soldiers who were away from both their homes and families began to desert as their own towns and villages became caught up in the war.

Photo by Gary Tacagni.

On November 15th 1645 the Royalists finally gave in and sought surrender terms. Their leaders argued very favourable terms of surrender, concealing the fact that they were very weak. The army was allowed to march out of the castle with their freedom and flying their banners high. They left behind provisions for only one more night, and they had even eaten their cats!

After the surrender of the Royalists the Parliamentarian army remained until orders were received to dismantle the castle. Men were bought in from Beeston and Rainsford on Merseyside to help with the destruction of the defenses, the castle was then left unoccupied.

Moving on to the more interesting topic of the treasure that is said to be located here, there are at least two versions regarding its reason for being here. It is said that the Royalist forces hid a great treasure in a deep well located within the castle before they surrendered, others say that Richard II flung it into the well to ensure that his victorious rival Bolingbroke would be unable to accquire it. It was widely accepted that the gold was guarded by demons and that anyone that goes down the well will be struck dumb or go mad.

At 370ft deep who knows what is at the bottom of it? Photo by Gary Tacagni.

English Heritage surveyors have recently lowered a camera down the well to try to uncover some of the secrets said to surround this well which is the deepest medieval well in England. As well as finding out if there is any truth to the legend of buried treasure in the bottom of the well, it is also hoped to inspect the lining of the well. The well is 370ft deep and it was dug to this depth to ensure a fresh water supply for the castle. The last inspection took place in the 1930s when debris was removed from the well leading to the discovery of two passageways leading off the main shaft, this may in fact support the story of a secret tunnel leading from the castle to one or more nearby farms which was used to bring provisions into the castle when it was under seige.

Does this lead to an undiscovered fortune? Photo by Gary Tacagni.

More recently a blockage has been found in the shaft at a depth of 250ft, once this has been cleared who knows what will be found (does anyone out there have any bolt croppers and plenty of rope lol).

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One Comment

Deep Blue

May 21st, 2009

I always like your style of writing. Well written and worth the hunt, however I need to be a ghostbuster first.

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