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Encyclopedia > Fort Southwick

Fort Southwick is one of the forts found on Portsdown Hill. It is the highest fort on the hill, and holds the water storage tanks for the other forts, supplying them via a brick lined aqueduct. Construction was started in 1861 and completed by 1870. It was designed to house a large compliment of men (about 220) in a crescent shaped barrack block. Its north projection has one full caponier to defend the dry ditch, and has two smaller demi-caponiers at the corners. A small musketry gallery crosses the ditch at the south west angle to cover a minor branch of the ditch. Mortar batteries of five mortars each can be found set into the rampart behind the demi caponiers.


In 1893 the fort was armed with a total of 23 guns:

  • Nine 64 lb (29kg rifled muzzle loaders
  • Eight 7in (17.5cm) rifled breech loaders
  • Six 8in (20cm) rifled muzzle loaded Howitzers (three were on ground platforms; the other three on traveling carriages)

A central spiral staircase from the surface gives access to four main tunnels running radially outward from it at uneven angles. These tunnels lead to the barrack block and caponiers, and past the magazine.


The communications "nerve centre", Underground Headquarters or UGHQ, for operation Overlord was in a secret network of tunnels located 100ft (30m) underneath Fort Southwick during the Second World War, well out of reach of any bombs of the era. The call sign of this base was 'MIN'.


Although disarmed in 1906, the fort was retained by the military as a barracks, and also used to train soldiers how to capture and hold a fort. It became a demobilisation centre for three years after the First World War. The fort was part of the Admiralty Research Establishment until 2002, when all operational use of the fort ceased. It was sold by the Ministry of Defence in July 2003 to the "Fort Southwick Company Limited", who intend to convert the barrack block into luxury apartments.


External links

  • Fort Southwick UGHQ (http://www.portsdown-tunnels.org.uk/palmerston_forts/fort_southwick/1_overview_p1.html)
  • Walk the Story > Fort Southwick (http://www.d-day60.co.uk/walk_fortsouthwick.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
List of forts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (221 words)
This is a list for articles on notable historic forts which may or may not be under current active use by a military.
There are also many towns named after a Fort, the largest being Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
See also the list of castles, as many early forts were called castles, and many castle sites were reused for later fortifications.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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