Penlee Battery Explained

Penlee Battery
Location:Rame Head
Cornwall
England
Coordinates:50.3203°N -4.1931°W
Map Type:Cornwall
Built:1889-92
Materials:Concrete
Earth
Used:1892-1956
Demolished:Mostly filled in
Open To Public:Yes

Penlee Battery is a nature reserve lying on the coastal headland of Penlee Point on the Rame Peninsula, in southeast Cornwall, England.

The site was formerly the location of a gun battery, constructed between 1889 and 1892. It was originally armed with two 6-inch BL guns and a 13.5-inch BL, the latter of which was the largest gun of the Plymouth defences. During World War I and II, the battery's armament was made up of three 9.2-inch guns.[1]

After the dissolution of coast artillery in the United Kingdom in 1956 the battery was disarmed and disposed of by the War Office. Many parts of the battery were demolished and gun positions filled in during the 1970s. One of the 6-inch emplacements remains intact, while the battery's magazines remain underground, but are filled in.[1]

It is home to a beach revealed at low tide,[2] and is famous among dragonfly enthusiasts as the site where Britain's first Green Darner dragonfly was found, in 1998.[3] [4]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Penlee Point Battery . 17 October 2021 . www.victorianforts.co.uk .
  2. Web site: Chapman. Peter. 2020-07-11. Golden beach hidden by the tide and its 67 ton military mystery. 2020-07-11. plymouthherald.
  3. Pellow, Keith (1999a) An influx of Green Darner Anax junius (Drury) into Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly - The First European Records Atropos No. 6 pp. 3-7
  4. Pellow, Keith (1999b) Common Green Darner Anax junius (Drury) in Cornwall and Isles of Scilly - The first British and European Records Journal of the British Dragonfly Society Vol. 15 No. 1 pp. 21-22