Marquess of Anglesey's Column
The Marquess of Anglesey's Column is a striking neoclassical monument standing on the Isle of Anglesey in north Wales, erected in honour of Field Marshal Henry William Paget, the first Marquess of Anglesey, who distinguished himself as one of the great cavalry commanders of the Napoleonic Wars. The column rises approximately 27 metres above the town of Llanfairpwll — commonly known by its shortened name from the famously long village name — and is topped by a bronze statue of the Marquess himself. It remains one of the most recognisable landmarks on the island and serves as both a tribute to military heroism and a popular tourist attraction offering panoramic views across the Menai Strait, Snowdonia, and on clear days, much of the surrounding landscape of northwest Wales.
The monument was built between 1816 and 1817, just a year or two after the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, in which the Marquess of Anglesey played a pivotal role commanding the Allied cavalry. During that famous engagement, Paget suffered the loss of his right leg when struck by one of the last cannon shots of the battle, reportedly prompting the famously stoic exchange with the Duke of Wellington in which he remarked "By God, sir, I've lost my leg!" and Wellington replied "By God, sir, so you have!" Paget survived and was celebrated as a hero throughout Britain. The local population of Anglesey, from which his title derived, were particularly proud of him and funded the column through public subscription. The bronze statue atop the column was added later in 1860, giving the monument its completed appearance.
The column is a Doric pillar of considerable proportions, built from local limestone, and dominates the surrounding area with an authority that reflects the solemn purpose behind its construction. Inside the column, a spiral staircase of 115 steps winds upward to a viewing platform just below the statue, which visitors can climb for breathtaking views. The structure is solid and austere in character, with the clean lines of neoclassical architecture lending it a dignified solemnity. Standing at its base, one feels the scale of the tribute paid to a single man — the column dwarfs the surrounding trees and modest buildings nearby — while the sound of wind and distant traffic from the busy A5 trunk road reminds you that this is a well-visited corner of Wales.
The surrounding landscape is quintessentially Anglesey — relatively flat agricultural land that contrasts beautifully with the dramatic mountain backdrop of Snowdonia visible to the southeast across the Menai Strait. The column sits near the village of Llanfairpwll, which is itself famous for having one of the longest place names in the world: Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch. The proximity of the Menai Suspension Bridge, designed by Thomas Telford and completed in 1826, means that within a short drive or walk visitors can encounter another extraordinary piece of early nineteenth-century engineering. The area is otherwise characterised by quiet lanes, stone farmhouses, and the gentle pastoral scenery typical of the island.
For practical visiting purposes, the column is easily accessible from the A5 road near Llanfairpwllpwll, which sits on the main route between the Menai Bridge and Holyhead. There is a small car park nearby and the site is well signposted. The column is managed and the interior is accessible during certain opening hours, typically during the summer months, when visitors can pay a modest fee to climb the internal staircase. Comfortable footwear is recommended for the spiral staircase. The site is best visited on a clear day when the views from the top are at their finest, encompassing the broad sweep of the Menai Strait, the mountains of Snowdonia, and the patchwork fields of Anglesey itself. Winter visits still offer the impressive exterior, though the interior staircase may be closed.
One of the more unusual details connected to the monument concerns the Marquess's severed leg itself, which achieved a peculiar afterlife in European history. After the Battle of Waterloo, the leg was buried in a garden in the village of Waterloo (then called Mont-Saint-Jean) in Belgium, where it eventually became something of a macabre tourist attraction in the nineteenth century — visitors would come to see the burial site of the famous limb. The Marquess himself reportedly visited the site on at least one occasion. This curious footnote to the story of the column adds a darkly fascinating dimension to what is otherwise a conventional piece of commemorative architecture, and reminds visitors that behind the stately stonework lies a very human story of battlefield courage, survival, and the strange ways in which history memorialises its heroes.