Listed Building: Gun Emplacement and Fort Henry (1411809)

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Grade II
Authority English Heritage
Date assigned 30 November 2012
Date last amended

Description

History Studland Bay was one of the two stretches of Dorset coastline where a German invasion was considered most likely. In 1940, the defence of the Dorset coast was the responsibility of V Corps whose 50th Division had its headquarters at Blandford Forum. Anti-tank islands were established in towns in the area and a number of stop lines were also constructed. Anti-invasion defences were constructed along Studland Bay in response to the threat of a German invasion. Forward defended localities were established along the line of the beach at Studland and a number of pillboxes and other defensive structures were constructed. Anti-tank cubes blocked possible exits from the beach at three locations and minefields were also situated amongst the sand dunes. Most of these defences were in place by early August 1940. In October 1940, the infantry battalion in the Studland Sub-Sector (Studland Defence Area) was the 7th Bn. Suffolk Regiment. By April 1941, it had been replaced by the 1st Bn. Coldstream Guards. The Dorset Home Guard unit also manning defences at Studland was No.2 (East Purbeck) Company, 7th (Wareham) Battalion was manned by No.2 (East Purbeck) Company, 7th (Wareham) Battalion of the Home Guard. From the autumn of 1943, Studland Bay became an amphibious assault training area as part of the preparations for D-Day on 6 June 1944, one of the most significant dates in modern history, defining the start of the final phase of World War II in Europe. Six weeks prior to D-Day, Allied troops gathered in Studland Bay to undertake three full-scale training exercises to prepare themselves for the amphibious landings that were to take place on the beaches of Normandy. The rehearsal, codenamed Exercise Smash 1, was the largest live ammunition practice of the whole war period; battle training was also carried out using the anti-invasion pillboxes erected within the Defence Area. The bay was also the scene of a major experiment to test the effectiveness of burning oil as a defence against a German seaborne invasion, known as Project Fougasse, it involved piping oil to the sea and firing it by explosive charges. By August 1940, a gun emplacement for a six-pounder gun had been constructed at Redend Point in Studland, part of the anti-invasion defences laid out around Studland Bay. Its line of fire was partly blocked by the construction in 1943 of Fort Henry, a purpose-built observation post, immediately to the east. It was built by the Canadian Royal Engineers and was named after their home base in Ontario. In April 1944 King George VI, Winston Churchill, General Sir Bernard Montgomery, General Dwight D. Eisenhower and Acting Admiral Louis Mountbatten observed a demonstration of carpet bombing followed by assault landings, part of Exercise Smash 1, from Fort Henry. Details MATERIALS: reinforced, shuttered concrete; brickwork to the interior of the gun emplacement. DESCRIPTION: Gun emplacement of 1940; to the east an observation post, known as Fort Henry, erected in 1943, both situated on Redend Point. The gun emplacement is built of concrete and brick. It s open-front faces north-east, overlooking Studland Bay, with a concrete canopy that breaks forwards slightly at the centre. Graffiti on the roof reads, "R. Daman 1940. AC 229 Batt. 58th Med. Reg.". The gun holdfast circle survives, while there are the remains of some original camouflage paint on the rear wall. To the rear are two underground rooms that are accessed from side passages. The left-hand room retains two ventilation shafts, although these are destroyed above ground. Fort Henry is situated on the cliff edge, immediately in front of the gun emplacement. It is a large rectangular structure of reinforced concrete and is orientated north-west to south-east. It measures 138 m long and 3 m wide and its walls are 1 m thick. To the seaward (north-east) elevation is a recessed observation slit that runs the entire length of the structure. Entrances at either end provide access to the interior which takes the form of a long, narrow corridor with a staggered blast wall at approximately the halfway point. Selected Sources Website Reference - Author: W. Foot - Title: Defence Areas: a national study of Second World War anti-invasion landscapes in England - Date: 14 September 2012 - URL: http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue//adsdata/arch-455-1/dissemination/pdf/Text_Reports/DA06_TEXT_-_STUDLAND_BAY.pdf Website Reference - Author: Council for British Archaeology - Title: Defence of Britain Archive - Date: 14 September 2012 - URL: http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/dob/?CFID=5268065&CFTOKEN=49643387 Website Reference - Author: Purbeck District Council - Title: Studland Conservation Area. Appraisal Document, 2012 - Date: 18 September 2012 - URL: http://www.dorsetforyou.com/media.jsp?mediaid=172439&filetype=pdf National Grid Reference: SZ0378482841

Map

No mapped location recorded.

Location

Grid reference Not recorded
Civil Parish Studland; Dorset
District (historic) Purbeck
Unitary Authority Dorset

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Related Monuments/Buildings (2)

Record last edited

Aug 23 2013 10:06AM