Verne High Angle Battery: Difference between revisions
m →External links: WP:CHECKWIKI error fixes + general fixes using AWB (7926) |
External link to Victorian Forts data sheets, remove broken PFS links |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
{{Commons category|Verne High Angle Battery}} |
{{Commons category|Verne High Angle Battery}} |
||
*[http://www.theheritagecoast.co.uk/historyfile/portland_and_weymouth/dorsets_coastal_defences/high_angle_stages.htm Dorset's Coastal Defences. High Angle: first and second stage] |
*[http://www.theheritagecoast.co.uk/historyfile/portland_and_weymouth/dorsets_coastal_defences/high_angle_stages.htm Dorset's Coastal Defences. High Angle: first and second stage] |
||
*[http://www. |
*[http://www.victorianforts.co.uk/pdf/datasheets/verneha.pdf Victorian Forts data sheet] |
||
{{Coord|50.5581|-2.4334|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}} |
{{Coord|50.5581|-2.4334|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}} |
||
Revision as of 19:38, 22 January 2012
The High Angle Battery is a derelict fort built in 1892 on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, England. The battery was built as part of Britain's Coastal Defences in 1892 and is located in a disused Portland Stone quarry at the northern end of the island. Just to the north, at the top of high cliffs of Portland is the Verne Citadel with which it would have formed part of an impressive defence installation, protecting both merchant and naval shipping using Portland Harbour.
Being down in a quarry the guns were hidden from view of any passing enemy ships, the element of surprise would keep them moving on, minimising a possible threat. The "high angle" that the RML 9 inch 12 ton guns fired at ensured shells dropped down to inflict maximum damage on the less well protected upper decks of any attacking vessel, the sides of which were usually rather better armoured.
Positions were built for eight guns but in the event only six were installed. The supply of shells were stored in underground magazines reached by a short rail. Shelters for the men were also to be found here, their main accommodation being in the adjacent Verne buildings.
The pace of maritime warfare increased with the use of smaller craft like torpedo boats, and the big guns would be far less likely to score a hit. As a result, they had been in use for just six years when they were taken out of service in 1898. The Battery was decommissioned in 1906, a short lifespan on the whole. Nevertheless the idea was adopted elsewhere with some enthusiasm, especially in the United States.
The Portland installation is the best preserved Battery of its type in the United Kingdom and is a scheduled ancient monument but remains hidden from view: a short walk across from a tiny car park that serves the nearby Verne will soon reveal its layout in the lower levels of the shallow quarry.