The history of Tenghui Tower
Tenghui Tower was built in Qingganlong for three years (1738). It was built in Outing Township to review Xinchang No.5, and it is a feng shui tower made of shellfish, lime and sand. The tower is hexagonal, with seven floors, about 20.3 meters high, and the periphery of the bottom floor is 1 meter. The tower is empty, with overlapping eaves on the second floor and arched doors on six sides of each floor. Tasha is a small hexagonal tower with five floors, which is a relatively rare form of tower-on-tower.
The plaque of Tenghui Tower was inscribed by Xin Changwu, and the couplets were engraved on both sides of the tower door, "The clouds steamed Xia Wei's seven-story grand view, and the five ridges were full of clothes." Because of its high historical and artistic value, the tower was announced by the municipal government as the first batch of municipal cultural relics protection units in 1988, and was announced by the provincial government as the seventh batch of provincial cultural relics protection units in 20 12+00.
Tenghui Pagoda was included in the book Appreciation of China Pagoda published by Tongji University Press, because the architectural structure of adding towers to towers is rare in China.