Staddon Fort Explained

Staddon Fort
Type:Fort
Built:1861-1869
Materials:Earth
Masonry
Condition:Complete
Ownership:Ministry of Defence
Open To Public:No

Staddon Fort is a 19th-century fort, built as a result of the Royal Commission on National Defence of 1859. Part of an extensive scheme known as Palmerston Forts, after the prime minister who championed the scheme, it was built to defend the landward approaches to the east of Plymouth, as an element of the plan for the defence of the Royal Naval Dockyard at Devonport.

Designed by Captain (later Maj General) Edmund Frederick Du Cane,[1] it was built by George Roach and Company. The fort was connected by a military road to the nearby Stamford Fort, Watch House Battery and Brownhill Battery.[2] It was designed to be armed with 34 guns and 6 mortars. To house the fort's garrison a barrack block for 250 men was built within the rear section of the fort.[3]

By the early 1900s the fort had become obsolete as a defensive position and was disarmed. It remains in use by the Royal Navy as a communications centre. Along with a number of other parts of the Staddon Heights defences, it became a scheduled monument in 1969.

Bibliography

50.346°N -4.114°W

Notes and References

  1. Andrew Pye & Freddy Woodward, (1996) The Historic Defences of Plymouth, Cornwall County Council, p169
  2. The National Archives WO78/2314, 29 Maps of fortifications in the environs of Plymouth, 1857-1920
  3. https://www.victorianforts.co.uk/pdf/datasheets/staddon.pdf Victorian Forts datasheet