The Heuchelberger Warte is a former watchtower in the Heilbronn district, which today serves as a lookout tower. It is 315 m above sea level. NN at the eastern tip of the Heuchelberg ridge and allows a view over large parts of the Württemberg lowlands. If the weather is good, you supposedly have a distance of up to 80 km from here. The panoramic view stretches from the Stuttgart TV tower to the Heidelberger Königsstuhl, which was built in 1483 under the Württemberg Count Eberhard im Bart. It served as the western cornerstone of the "Württemberg Landgraben", a border wall that formed the northern border of Württemberg at the time and blocked off the Neckar Valley between Heuchelberg and Löwensteiner Mountains over a length of 23 km. The view that the tower offered over large areas of the lowlands was used to monitor the border. When Württemberg expanded to the north in 1805, the moat lost its importance and was leveled. Since the tower never played a significant role in military conflicts, it fell into disrepair over the course of the following centuries.
It was not until the end of the 19th century that the meaning of the tower was considered, but no longer as a waiting tower but as a lookout tower. With donations from the community of Großgartach, where the tower was located, it was renovated or rebuilt in its current form in 1897/98 in cooperation with the Heilbronn local group of the Swabian Alb Association, and in the process also increased somewhat. Another renovation took place in 1952.
Sources: Wikipedia & information board on site