Andle Stone
| Andle Stone | |
|---|---|
Andle Stone - a huge natural boulder | |
| Location | Derbyshire |
| Coordinates | 53°09′49″N 1°38′31″W / 53.163550°N 1.642045°W |
| OS grid reference | SK241630 |
| Architectural style(s) | British pre-Roman Architecture |
The Andle Stone is a large gritstone boulder on Stanton Moor in Derbyshire. The stone block is 6m long, 4m high and lies within a low, circular, dry stone wall enclosure. It is covered in cup and ring marks. It is also known as the Oundle Stone, the Anvil Stone or the Twopenny Loaf.
There is a memorial inscription on the west-facing concave face of the boulder, commemorating the Duke of Wellington, Lieutenant Colonel William Thornhill (2nd son of Bache Thornhill of Stanton Hall) and the battles of Assaye and Waterloo. The inscription reads:
|
FIELD-MARSHALL
DUKE OF WELLINGTON
DIED 14 SEPT 1852
AGED 82 YEARS |
LIEUT-COLONEL
WILLIAM THORNHILL
7 HUSSARS
DIED 9 DEC 1851
AGED 71 YEARS | |
ASSYE 1803 WATERLOO 1815 | ||
The Andle Stone and the nearby Doll Tor stone circle are both on private farmland with no public access rights.