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Dartmouth Castle

Dartmouth Castle is an artillery fort, built to protect Dartmouth harbour in Devon, England. The earliest parts of the castle date from the 1380s, when, in response to the threat of a French attack, the civic authorities created a small enclosure castle overlooking the mouth of the Dart estuary. This was intended to engage enemy ships with catapults and possibly early cannon, and incorporated the local chapel of Saint Petroc within its walls. At the end of the 15th century, the castle was expanded with an artillery tower and an iron chain which could be stretched across the harbour to a tower at Godmerock; this addition formed the oldest known purpose-built coast artillery fort in Britain. Further gun batteries were added during the French invasion scare of the 1540s.

Dartmouth Castle
Dartmouth, Devon, England
Dartmouth Castle, showing the 15th-century gun positions and St Petroc's Church
Dartmouth Castle
Coordinates50°20′31″N 3°34′06″W / 50.34203°N 3.56829°W / 50.34203; -3.56829
Grid referencegrid reference SX885503
TypeArtillery fort
Site information
OwnerEnglish Heritage
Open to
the public
Yes
Site history
MaterialsLimestone, slate
EventsEnglish Civil War, World war 2

The castle saw service during the English Civil War of 1642 to 1646, during which its vulnerability to attack from the land became apparent, resulting in the Gallants Bower defensive work above it being used to provide additional protection. In 1748, a new gun position called the Grand Battery was added to the castle, equipped with twelve guns. After years of neglect in the early 19th century, the castle was upgraded in 1859 with modern artillery, but defending the port of Dartmouth was no longer a military priority. By the early years of the 20th century the castle was considered redundant by the authorities, who opened it to visitors. It was brought back into use during the Second World War, but in 1955 it was finally retired from service. In the 21st century, it is managed by English Heritage and the castle received 37,940 visitors in 2007.

History Edit

14th–15th centuries Edit

Dartmouth Castle was built to protect the coastal town of Dartmouth in Devon.[1] By the 12th century, the town's harbour, located in the estuary of the River Dart, was an important trading and fishing port, able to hold up to 600 vessels.[2] It also had a reputation as a centre for both piracy and privateering, particularly for its attacks on French shipping.[3] By the 1370s, during the Hundred Years War, Dartmouth was a key target for the French navy and the Crown repeatedly advised the town to improve its defences.[4] Nothing was done, however, until in 1388 John Hawley, the mayor of Dartmouth and a privateer, was authorised by Richard II to raise funds from the town for a new "fortalice by the sea" to defend the harbour.[5]

 
Remains of the fortalice wall

The fortalice, or small fort, took the form of an enclosure castle, with a curtain wall protected by mural towers and a gate tower.[6] It was constructed on land in the manor of Stoke Fleming, belonging to the Carew family, lent by them due to the threat of French attack, and was built around a pre-existing chapel to Saint Petroc on the site.[7] It held catapults to attack enemy ships, and may also have been armed with early cannon and equipped with a chain to block the entrance to the harbour.[8] It did not see active service, but may have deterred the original plans of the French and Breton attack force in 1404, which, under the command of Tanneguy du Chastel, landed at Slapton Sands instead, where they were then dispersed by the local militia.[9] The Carew family subsequently built a family house in an inside corner of the fortalice.[10]

In 1481, Henry VII entered into fresh discussions with the town about the defences.[9] In 1462, the Crown had agreed to pay Dartmouth £30 a year to maintain a chain across the harbour for twenty years, and the town were probably keen to extend this profitable arrangement before it expired.[9][nb 1] Henry agreed to pay £150 over five years for the construction of a new artillery tower, with an annual subsidy of £30 towards the maintenance costs, later increased to £40 a year.[9] The new tower was placed alongside the old fortalice, using stone from Cornworthy and Kingsbridge and a team of up to 12 stonemasons.[9] The project dragged on until fears of a French invasion grew in 1486; two "great murderer" guns were installed and by 1492 there were four murderer and twelve serpentine guns installed there.[12] The tower was finally completed in 1495, with a protective chain linking to the other side of the river supported by small boats called "cobbellys", where it was protected by a tower at Godmerock.[13] Another castle, Kingswear, was also built by Dartmouth, on the opposite side of the estuary.[14]

16th–18th centuries Edit

 
A depiction of the castle in 1794, by Paul Sandby

In 1543, Henry VIII allied himself with Spain in a war against France.[15] Despite Henry's initial successes, France and Spain made peace in 1544, leaving England exposed to a French invasion, backed by her allies in Scotland.[16] In response, Henry issued an instruction to improve the country's defences, particularly along the south coast.[17] Dartmouth Castle was reinforced by three new gun batteries, one on each side of the gun tower, and another, Lamberd's Bulwarke, positioned in the south-east corner of the fortalice.[18]

Sir Peter Carew, a soldier and the local Member of Parliament for Dartmouth, opposed this final addition, arguing that it trespassed on the family's house within the castle.[19] He seized the castle and threw out the town's officers.[19] A law case followed, and in 1554 the town regained the property after Carew fled the county facing charges of treachery; he returned in 1556 and retook the castle.[19] Eventually a reprieve was agreed under which the town regained control of the fortifications and the Carews continued to occupy the house.[20]

In 1597, with the threat of a Spanish invasion, the gun tower was improved and Lamberd's Bulwarke repaired.[20] Two years later, Hortensio Spinola, a Spanish spy, described the castle as being defended "with 24 pieces and 50 men", commenting that the harbour was well protected and that the inhabitants were "warlike".[21]

At the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642 between the supporters of Charles I and those of Parliament, Dartmouth initially sided with Parliament and the castle was guarded by five men.[22] In 1643, Prince Maurice besieged the town and the castle was overcome by artillery positioned on the higher ground of the overlooking hill behind it.[23] An earthwork fort, called Gallants Bower, may subsequently have been built to protect this vulnerable position; an alternative explanation is that the fort was first built in 1627 and was simply brought back into use during the conflict.[24] In January 1646, Sir Thomas Fairfax led a Parliamentary army to retake Dartmouth. He first took the town, then Gallants Bower, before forcing the surrender of Sir Hugh Pollard, the castle's commander, the following day.[23] The Carews' house was probably badly damaged during the attack.[25]

During the Interregnum, Gallants Bower was decommissioned but the castle itself remained in use; the Carews' house was pulled down.[26] A governor, Sir John Fowell, was appointed to run the castle and the local defences, and to prevent smuggling.[27] Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 and initially granted Dartmouth Castle, and the former annual subsidy, to the town once again.[28] By 1662, however, the fortifications in Dartmouth were garrisoned by a royal force of 23 men and Sir John, who continued in his post as captain and governor until 1677.[29] Fears of a Dutch and French attack resulted in the castle being maintained until the 1690s.[30]

The castle was neglected at the start of the 18th century, and a survey in 1715 reported that it was in a "ruinous condition" and that none of its artillery had been adequately maintained.[31] A renewed threat from France prompted fresh work: in 1741, Lamberd's Bulwarke was strengthened, and in 1748 the government then renamed the bulwark the Grand Battery, transforming it into a two-tiered platform armed with twelve guns.[32] The older parts of the castle were retained by the town and used primarily for accommodation and storage.[33] The port of Dartmouth began to decline in importance, however, with nearby Plymouth taking over much of its former trade.[34]

19th–21st centuries Edit

 
Traversing 19th-century artillery gun on the Old Battery roof

Dartmouth Castle was garrisoned during the Napoleonic Wars by the volunteer Dartmouth Artillery unit, but saw no active service.[30] At the end of the conflict, the castle's guns were reduced in number and the garrison cut back to a single, caretaker gunner.[35] In 1820, there were only two serviceable guns and, in 1847, the writer Clarkson Stanfield observed that the castle, while picturesque, was "not spacious, and mounts but a few guns".[36]

The introduction of shell guns and steam ships during the 1840s created a new risk that the French might successfully attack along the south coast, and fears grew of a conflict in the early 1850s.[37] Further worries about France, combined with the development of rifled cannon and iron-clad warships, led to the Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom being established in 1859, and expressing fears about the security of the south coast.[38] As a result, the Grand Battery at Dartmouth Castle was rebuilt and retitled the Dartmouth Point Battery, with shell-proof, granite defences protecting three traversing gun emplacements for 68-pounder guns looking out to sea, and two 10-inch 86 cwt. guns on the roof; one small 8-inch howitzer protected the entrance to the harbour itself.[39][40] It was manned by three professional soldiers, and a team of over fifty-five reservists, drawn from the newly formed Sixth Devonshire Artillery Volunteer Corps.[41] The castle, however, was of low military priority, only of importance because the harbour might be used to as a staging post to attack Plymouth, and the guns allocated it were old-fashioned.[39] A further upgrade in 1888 again installed only out-dated artillery pieces.[34]

By 1909, the bulk of the castle was considered obsolete and the War Office transferred it to the Office of Works, who carried out restoration work and opened it to visitors.[42] It reentered service during the Second World War, when it was rearmed with two 4.7-inch (11.9 cm) quick-firing guns, dating from the First World War and housed in concrete gun houses, to protect merchant convoys and the Philips' shipyard.[43] The castle was manned by members of the British Army; officers lived in a nearby cottage, non-commissioned officers in the castle itself, and other ranks in the 19th century fortifications, and later in temporary Nissen huts.[44]

In 1955, the castle was transferred back to the Ministry of Works and repaired; the Dartmouth Point Battery, by now known as the Old Battery, was leased back to the town for use as a restaurant; and the site was reopened to the public.[45] In the 21st century it is managed by English Heritage, with the Grand Battery displayed as it would have appeared in the 19th century; it received 37,940 visitors in 2007.[46] The 14th-century gun tower is protected under UK law as a Grade I listed building, the 19th-century gun battery as a Grade II* listed building.[6]

Architecture Edit

 
Plan of the north part of the castle site: A – north gun platform; B – gun tower (harbour chain); C – gun tower (guns); D – Saint Petrox Church; E – south gun platform

Dartmouth Castle occupies a rocky outcrop, overlooking the entrance to Dartmouth harbour.[47] On the north side of the site is the main gun tower, looking out across the River Dart, and Saint Petrox Church; to the south-east is the Old Battery, facing out to sea.[48] In the south-west corner are the remains of the original fortalice defences, consisting of a corner tower, part of the moat and parts of the wall, 7 feet 6 inches (2.29 m) thick and up to 23 feet (7.0 m) high.[49]

The gun tower dates from the end of the end of the 15th century, and is the oldest known purpose-built coast artillery fort in Britain.[30] The tower is three storeys tall, with a semi-circular section made from limestone rubble that contained the mechanisms for the harbour chain, and a square section built from slate which contained the guns.[50] Each level has two main rooms with a circular and rectangular shape respectively – this design was probably the result of changes in the plan during the construction work.[51] Originally the basement held the castle's artillery guns, which had primitive gun-ports, originally protected from the sea by wooden shutters.[52] The ground floor rooms would have formed offices and living space for the garrison, in addition to containing the chain room, with a pulley and capstan for raising the chain defence.[53] The first floor was used for accommodation and was fitted with an oven.[54] Gunloops for handguns ran around both the basement, the ground floor, and the first floor for close defence.[55] Lighter artillery would have been positioned on the roof, where the battlements were raised in height after the castle was first built to deal with the threat posed by musket fire from the higher ground behind the castle.[54] An 18 feet (5.5 m) high turret rises above the roof level.[56]

The main gun tower is flanked by two mid-16th century gun platforms, altered in the 18th century to house newer forms of artillery.[57] Just behind the gun tower is Saint Petrox Church, a three-aisled building which dates in its current form to 1641, with some alterations resulting from its restoration in 1833.[58]

Old Battery dates from 1861, when it was called the Dartmouth Point Battery, and occupies the former site of the Grand Battery and Lamberd's Bulwarke.[30] On the north-east side of the complex is a guard room, which lay above the magazines.[59] It was protected from attack from the landward side with a ditch, rifle-loops and murder-holes.[59] In the main part of the battery, there are three vaulted casemates to hold traversing heavy guns pointing out to sea, with a smaller gun position covering the harbour entrance; a further two heavy guns would have been positioned on the roof.[60] A white concrete building, originally a coastal gun position disguised as a medieval turret, now acts as a ticket office.[61] Behind the Old Battery complex is a 19th-century tower that functioned as a lighthouse between 1856 and 1886.[62]

In Art and Literature Edit

Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poetical illustration, Dartmouth Castle, in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833, accompanies an engraving of a painting by Thomas Allom showing the Castle and Harbour.[63] This poem reflects how what had been a bastion of war has now become a holiday destination.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ It is difficult to accurately compare 15th-century and modern prices or incomes. £30 in 1462 could equate to between £177,000 and £11 million in 2015 terms, depending on the measure used; £150 in 1481 could equate to between £965,000 and £60 million.[11]

References Edit

  1. ^ Davison 2000, p. 19
  2. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 19–20; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  3. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 19–21
  4. ^ Davison 2000, p. 20
  5. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 20–21
  6. ^ a b "Dartmouth Castle", Historic England, retrieved 16 August 2016
  7. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 17, 26; Paul Pattison, "Sir Peter Carew and Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  8. ^ Davison 2000, p. 22
  9. ^ a b c d e Davison 2000, p. 23; O'Neil 1936, p. 135
  10. ^ Davison 2000, p. 26
  11. ^ "Measuring Worth Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1830 to Present", Measuring Worth, retrieved 16 August 2016
  12. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 23–24
  13. ^ Davison 2000, p. 24; O'Neil 1936, p. 136; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  14. ^ Davison 2000, p. 24
  15. ^ Hale 1983, pp. 79–80
  16. ^ Hale 1983, p. 80
  17. ^ Harrington 2007, pp. 29–30
  18. ^ Davison 2000, p. 25
  19. ^ a b c Davison 2000, p. 27; Paul Pattison, "Sir Peter Carew and Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  20. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 27
  21. ^ O'Neil 1936, pp. 144–145
  22. ^ Davison 2000, p. 27; O'Neil 1936, p. 148
  23. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 28
  24. ^ Davison 2000, p. 28; O'Neil 1936, p. 146
  25. ^ Davison 2000, p. 30
  26. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 29, 31
  27. ^ O'Neil 1936, pp. 150–151
  28. ^ Davison 2000, p. 29
  29. ^ O'Neil 1936, p. 151; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  30. ^ a b c d "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  31. ^ "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016; Davison 2000, p. 30
  32. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 30–31
  33. ^ Davison 2000, p. 31
  34. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 32
  35. ^ "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016; Davison 2000, p. 32
  36. ^ Davison 2000, p. 32; Stanfield 1847, p. 18
  37. ^ Coad 1985, p. 76; Pattison 2009, p. 43; Davison 2000, p. 32
  38. ^ Brooks 1996, p. 16
  39. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 32; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  40. ^ "Dartmouth Point Battery" (PDF). www.victorianforts.co.uk. Victorian Forts and Artillery. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  41. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 6–7
  42. ^ O'Neil 1936, p. 129; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  43. ^ Davison 2000, p. 34; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  44. ^ Davison 2000, p. 35
  45. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 35–36; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  46. ^ Davison 2000, p. 36; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016; "Tourism Trends in Devon, 2007" (PDF), Devon County Council, p. 21, retrieved 16 August 2016
  47. ^ Davison 2000, p. 37
  48. ^ Davison 2000, p. 38
  49. ^ Davison 2000, p. 18; O'Neil 1936, p. 133; "Dartmouth Castle", Historic England, retrieved 16 August 2016
  50. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 11–12; O'Neil 1936, p. 137; "Dartmouth Castle", Historic England, retrieved 16 August 2016
  51. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 11–12; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  52. ^ Davison 2000, p. 12; O'Neil 1936, pp. 140–142
  53. ^ Davison 2000, p. 12; O'Neil 1936, pp. 138–139
  54. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 14
  55. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 12–13
  56. ^ O'Neil 1936, p. 138
  57. ^ Davison 2000, p. 15
  58. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 17–18; O'Neil 1936, p. 129
  59. ^ a b Davison 2000, p. 6
  60. ^ Pattison 2009, p. 6; "History of Dartmouth Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 16 August 2016
  61. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 5, 35
  62. ^ Davison 2000, pp. 12, 18
  63. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1832). "picture". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833. Fisher, Son & Co.Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1832). "poetical illustration". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833. Fisher, Son & Co.

Bibliography Edit

  • Brooks, Stephen (1996). Southsea Castle. Andover, UK: Pitkin Guides. ISBN 0-85372-809-7.
  • Coad, J. G. (1985). "Hurst Castle: The Evolution of a Tudor Fortress 1790–1945". Post-Medieval Archaeology. 19: 63–104. doi:10.1179/pma.1985.005.
  • Davison, Brian K. (2000). Dartmouth Castle, Devon. London, UK: English Heritage. ISBN 1-85074-759-8.
  • Hale, J. R. (1983). Renaissance War Studies. London, UK: Hambledon Press. ISBN 0-907628-17-6.
  • Harrington, Peter (2007). The Castles of Henry VIII. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-0380-1.
  • O'Neil, B. H. St. John (1936). "Dartmouth Castle and Other Defences of Dartmouth Haven". Archaeologia. 85: 129–159. doi:10.1017/S0261340900015186.
  • Pattison, Paul (2009). Pendennis Castle and St Mawes Castle. London, UK: English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-85074-723-9.
  • Stanfield, Clarkson (1847). Stanfield's Coast Scenery: A Series of Picturesque Views in the British Channel and on the Coast of France (2nd ed.). London, UK: Smith, Elder and Co. OCLC 55157203.

External links Edit

  • English Heritage visitors' page

dartmouth, castle, artillery, fort, built, protect, dartmouth, harbour, devon, england, earliest, parts, castle, date, from, 1380s, when, response, threat, french, attack, civic, authorities, created, small, enclosure, castle, overlooking, mouth, dart, estuary. Dartmouth Castle is an artillery fort built to protect Dartmouth harbour in Devon England The earliest parts of the castle date from the 1380s when in response to the threat of a French attack the civic authorities created a small enclosure castle overlooking the mouth of the Dart estuary This was intended to engage enemy ships with catapults and possibly early cannon and incorporated the local chapel of Saint Petroc within its walls At the end of the 15th century the castle was expanded with an artillery tower and an iron chain which could be stretched across the harbour to a tower at Godmerock this addition formed the oldest known purpose built coast artillery fort in Britain Further gun batteries were added during the French invasion scare of the 1540s Dartmouth CastleDartmouth Devon EnglandDartmouth Castle showing the 15th century gun positions and St Petroc s ChurchDartmouth CastleCoordinates50 20 31 N 3 34 06 W 50 34203 N 3 56829 W 50 34203 3 56829Grid referencegrid reference SX885503TypeArtillery fortSite informationOwnerEnglish HeritageOpen tothe publicYesSite historyMaterialsLimestone slateEventsEnglish Civil War World war 2The castle saw service during the English Civil War of 1642 to 1646 during which its vulnerability to attack from the land became apparent resulting in the Gallants Bower defensive work above it being used to provide additional protection In 1748 a new gun position called the Grand Battery was added to the castle equipped with twelve guns After years of neglect in the early 19th century the castle was upgraded in 1859 with modern artillery but defending the port of Dartmouth was no longer a military priority By the early years of the 20th century the castle was considered redundant by the authorities who opened it to visitors It was brought back into use during the Second World War but in 1955 it was finally retired from service In the 21st century it is managed by English Heritage and the castle received 37 940 visitors in 2007 Contents 1 History 1 1 14th 15th centuries 1 2 16th 18th centuries 1 3 19th 21st centuries 2 Architecture 3 In Art and Literature 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksHistory Edit14th 15th centuries Edit Dartmouth Castle was built to protect the coastal town of Dartmouth in Devon 1 By the 12th century the town s harbour located in the estuary of the River Dart was an important trading and fishing port able to hold up to 600 vessels 2 It also had a reputation as a centre for both piracy and privateering particularly for its attacks on French shipping 3 By the 1370s during the Hundred Years War Dartmouth was a key target for the French navy and the Crown repeatedly advised the town to improve its defences 4 Nothing was done however until in 1388 John Hawley the mayor of Dartmouth and a privateer was authorised by Richard II to raise funds from the town for a new fortalice by the sea to defend the harbour 5 nbsp Remains of the fortalice wallThe fortalice or small fort took the form of an enclosure castle with a curtain wall protected by mural towers and a gate tower 6 It was constructed on land in the manor of Stoke Fleming belonging to the Carew family lent by them due to the threat of French attack and was built around a pre existing chapel to Saint Petroc on the site 7 It held catapults to attack enemy ships and may also have been armed with early cannon and equipped with a chain to block the entrance to the harbour 8 It did not see active service but may have deterred the original plans of the French and Breton attack force in 1404 which under the command of Tanneguy du Chastel landed at Slapton Sands instead where they were then dispersed by the local militia 9 The Carew family subsequently built a family house in an inside corner of the fortalice 10 In 1481 Henry VII entered into fresh discussions with the town about the defences 9 In 1462 the Crown had agreed to pay Dartmouth 30 a year to maintain a chain across the harbour for twenty years and the town were probably keen to extend this profitable arrangement before it expired 9 nb 1 Henry agreed to pay 150 over five years for the construction of a new artillery tower with an annual subsidy of 30 towards the maintenance costs later increased to 40 a year 9 The new tower was placed alongside the old fortalice using stone from Cornworthy and Kingsbridge and a team of up to 12 stonemasons 9 The project dragged on until fears of a French invasion grew in 1486 two great murderer guns were installed and by 1492 there were four murderer and twelve serpentine guns installed there 12 The tower was finally completed in 1495 with a protective chain linking to the other side of the river supported by small boats called cobbellys where it was protected by a tower at Godmerock 13 Another castle Kingswear was also built by Dartmouth on the opposite side of the estuary 14 16th 18th centuries Edit nbsp A depiction of the castle in 1794 by Paul SandbyIn 1543 Henry VIII allied himself with Spain in a war against France 15 Despite Henry s initial successes France and Spain made peace in 1544 leaving England exposed to a French invasion backed by her allies in Scotland 16 In response Henry issued an instruction to improve the country s defences particularly along the south coast 17 Dartmouth Castle was reinforced by three new gun batteries one on each side of the gun tower and another Lamberd s Bulwarke positioned in the south east corner of the fortalice 18 Sir Peter Carew a soldier and the local Member of Parliament for Dartmouth opposed this final addition arguing that it trespassed on the family s house within the castle 19 He seized the castle and threw out the town s officers 19 A law case followed and in 1554 the town regained the property after Carew fled the county facing charges of treachery he returned in 1556 and retook the castle 19 Eventually a reprieve was agreed under which the town regained control of the fortifications and the Carews continued to occupy the house 20 In 1597 with the threat of a Spanish invasion the gun tower was improved and Lamberd s Bulwarke repaired 20 Two years later Hortensio Spinola a Spanish spy described the castle as being defended with 24 pieces and 50 men commenting that the harbour was well protected and that the inhabitants were warlike 21 At the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642 between the supporters of Charles I and those of Parliament Dartmouth initially sided with Parliament and the castle was guarded by five men 22 In 1643 Prince Maurice besieged the town and the castle was overcome by artillery positioned on the higher ground of the overlooking hill behind it 23 An earthwork fort called Gallants Bower may subsequently have been built to protect this vulnerable position an alternative explanation is that the fort was first built in 1627 and was simply brought back into use during the conflict 24 In January 1646 Sir Thomas Fairfax led a Parliamentary army to retake Dartmouth He first took the town then Gallants Bower before forcing the surrender of Sir Hugh Pollard the castle s commander the following day 23 The Carews house was probably badly damaged during the attack 25 During the Interregnum Gallants Bower was decommissioned but the castle itself remained in use the Carews house was pulled down 26 A governor Sir John Fowell was appointed to run the castle and the local defences and to prevent smuggling 27 Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 and initially granted Dartmouth Castle and the former annual subsidy to the town once again 28 By 1662 however the fortifications in Dartmouth were garrisoned by a royal force of 23 men and Sir John who continued in his post as captain and governor until 1677 29 Fears of a Dutch and French attack resulted in the castle being maintained until the 1690s 30 The castle was neglected at the start of the 18th century and a survey in 1715 reported that it was in a ruinous condition and that none of its artillery had been adequately maintained 31 A renewed threat from France prompted fresh work in 1741 Lamberd s Bulwarke was strengthened and in 1748 the government then renamed the bulwark the Grand Battery transforming it into a two tiered platform armed with twelve guns 32 The older parts of the castle were retained by the town and used primarily for accommodation and storage 33 The port of Dartmouth began to decline in importance however with nearby Plymouth taking over much of its former trade 34 19th 21st centuries Edit nbsp Traversing 19th century artillery gun on the Old Battery roofDartmouth Castle was garrisoned during the Napoleonic Wars by the volunteer Dartmouth Artillery unit but saw no active service 30 At the end of the conflict the castle s guns were reduced in number and the garrison cut back to a single caretaker gunner 35 In 1820 there were only two serviceable guns and in 1847 the writer Clarkson Stanfield observed that the castle while picturesque was not spacious and mounts but a few guns 36 The introduction of shell guns and steam ships during the 1840s created a new risk that the French might successfully attack along the south coast and fears grew of a conflict in the early 1850s 37 Further worries about France combined with the development of rifled cannon and iron clad warships led to the Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom being established in 1859 and expressing fears about the security of the south coast 38 As a result the Grand Battery at Dartmouth Castle was rebuilt and retitled the Dartmouth Point Battery with shell proof granite defences protecting three traversing gun emplacements for 68 pounder guns looking out to sea and two 10 inch 86 cwt guns on the roof one small 8 inch howitzer protected the entrance to the harbour itself 39 40 It was manned by three professional soldiers and a team of over fifty five reservists drawn from the newly formed Sixth Devonshire Artillery Volunteer Corps 41 The castle however was of low military priority only of importance because the harbour might be used to as a staging post to attack Plymouth and the guns allocated it were old fashioned 39 A further upgrade in 1888 again installed only out dated artillery pieces 34 By 1909 the bulk of the castle was considered obsolete and the War Office transferred it to the Office of Works who carried out restoration work and opened it to visitors 42 It reentered service during the Second World War when it was rearmed with two 4 7 inch 11 9 cm quick firing guns dating from the First World War and housed in concrete gun houses to protect merchant convoys and the Philips shipyard 43 The castle was manned by members of the British Army officers lived in a nearby cottage non commissioned officers in the castle itself and other ranks in the 19th century fortifications and later in temporary Nissen huts 44 In 1955 the castle was transferred back to the Ministry of Works and repaired the Dartmouth Point Battery by now known as the Old Battery was leased back to the town for use as a restaurant and the site was reopened to the public 45 In the 21st century it is managed by English Heritage with the Grand Battery displayed as it would have appeared in the 19th century it received 37 940 visitors in 2007 46 The 14th century gun tower is protected under UK law as a Grade I listed building the 19th century gun battery as a Grade II listed building 6 Architecture Edit nbsp Plan of the north part of the castle site A north gun platform B gun tower harbour chain C gun tower guns D Saint Petrox Church E south gun platformDartmouth Castle occupies a rocky outcrop overlooking the entrance to Dartmouth harbour 47 On the north side of the site is the main gun tower looking out across the River Dart and Saint Petrox Church to the south east is the Old Battery facing out to sea 48 In the south west corner are the remains of the original fortalice defences consisting of a corner tower part of the moat and parts of the wall 7 feet 6 inches 2 29 m thick and up to 23 feet 7 0 m high 49 The gun tower dates from the end of the end of the 15th century and is the oldest known purpose built coast artillery fort in Britain 30 The tower is three storeys tall with a semi circular section made from limestone rubble that contained the mechanisms for the harbour chain and a square section built from slate which contained the guns 50 Each level has two main rooms with a circular and rectangular shape respectively this design was probably the result of changes in the plan during the construction work 51 Originally the basement held the castle s artillery guns which had primitive gun ports originally protected from the sea by wooden shutters 52 The ground floor rooms would have formed offices and living space for the garrison in addition to containing the chain room with a pulley and capstan for raising the chain defence 53 The first floor was used for accommodation and was fitted with an oven 54 Gunloops for handguns ran around both the basement the ground floor and the first floor for close defence 55 Lighter artillery would have been positioned on the roof where the battlements were raised in height after the castle was first built to deal with the threat posed by musket fire from the higher ground behind the castle 54 An 18 feet 5 5 m high turret rises above the roof level 56 The main gun tower is flanked by two mid 16th century gun platforms altered in the 18th century to house newer forms of artillery 57 Just behind the gun tower is Saint Petrox Church a three aisled building which dates in its current form to 1641 with some alterations resulting from its restoration in 1833 58 Old Battery dates from 1861 when it was called the Dartmouth Point Battery and occupies the former site of the Grand Battery and Lamberd s Bulwarke 30 On the north east side of the complex is a guard room which lay above the magazines 59 It was protected from attack from the landward side with a ditch rifle loops and murder holes 59 In the main part of the battery there are three vaulted casemates to hold traversing heavy guns pointing out to sea with a smaller gun position covering the harbour entrance a further two heavy guns would have been positioned on the roof 60 A white concrete building originally a coastal gun position disguised as a medieval turret now acts as a ticket office 61 Behind the Old Battery complex is a 19th century tower that functioned as a lighthouse between 1856 and 1886 62 In Art and Literature Edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Dartmouth Castle a poetical illustrationby L E L Letitia Elizabeth Landon s poetical illustration Dartmouth Castle in Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1833 accompanies an engraving of a painting by Thomas Allom showing the Castle and Harbour 63 This poem reflects how what had been a bastion of war has now become a holiday destination See also EditCastles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in EnglandNotes Edit It is difficult to accurately compare 15th century and modern prices or incomes 30 in 1462 could equate to between 177 000 and 11 million in 2015 terms depending on the measure used 150 in 1481 could equate to between 965 000 and 60 million 11 References Edit Davison 2000 p 19 Davison 2000 pp 19 20 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 19 21 Davison 2000 p 20 Davison 2000 pp 20 21 a b Dartmouth Castle Historic England retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 17 26 Paul Pattison Sir Peter Carew and Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 22 a b c d e Davison 2000 p 23 O Neil 1936 p 135 Davison 2000 p 26 Measuring Worth Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount 1830 to Present Measuring Worth retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 23 24 Davison 2000 p 24 O Neil 1936 p 136 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 24 Hale 1983 pp 79 80 Hale 1983 p 80 Harrington 2007 pp 29 30 Davison 2000 p 25 a b c Davison 2000 p 27 Paul Pattison Sir Peter Carew and Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 a b Davison 2000 p 27 O Neil 1936 pp 144 145 Davison 2000 p 27 O Neil 1936 p 148 a b Davison 2000 p 28 Davison 2000 p 28 O Neil 1936 p 146 Davison 2000 p 30 Davison 2000 pp 29 31 O Neil 1936 pp 150 151 Davison 2000 p 29 O Neil 1936 p 151 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 a b c d History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 30 Davison 2000 pp 30 31 Davison 2000 p 31 a b Davison 2000 p 32 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 32 Davison 2000 p 32 Stanfield 1847 p 18 Coad 1985 p 76 Pattison 2009 p 43 Davison 2000 p 32 Brooks 1996 p 16 a b Davison 2000 p 32 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Dartmouth Point Battery PDF www victorianforts co uk Victorian Forts and Artillery Retrieved 29 October 2018 Davison 2000 pp 6 7 O Neil 1936 p 129 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 34 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 35 Davison 2000 pp 35 36 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 36 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Tourism Trends in Devon 2007 PDF Devon County Council p 21 retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 37 Davison 2000 p 38 Davison 2000 p 18 O Neil 1936 p 133 Dartmouth Castle Historic England retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 11 12 O Neil 1936 p 137 Dartmouth Castle Historic England retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 11 12 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 p 12 O Neil 1936 pp 140 142 Davison 2000 p 12 O Neil 1936 pp 138 139 a b Davison 2000 p 14 Davison 2000 pp 12 13 O Neil 1936 p 138 Davison 2000 p 15 Davison 2000 pp 17 18 O Neil 1936 p 129 a b Davison 2000 p 6 Pattison 2009 p 6 History of Dartmouth Castle English Heritage retrieved 16 August 2016 Davison 2000 pp 5 35 Davison 2000 pp 12 18 Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1832 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1833 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1832 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1833 Fisher Son amp Co Bibliography EditBrooks Stephen 1996 Southsea Castle Andover UK Pitkin Guides ISBN 0 85372 809 7 Coad J G 1985 Hurst Castle The Evolution of a Tudor Fortress 1790 1945 Post Medieval Archaeology 19 63 104 doi 10 1179 pma 1985 005 Davison Brian K 2000 Dartmouth Castle Devon London UK English Heritage ISBN 1 85074 759 8 Hale J R 1983 Renaissance War Studies London UK Hambledon Press ISBN 0 907628 17 6 Harrington Peter 2007 The Castles of Henry VIII Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 0380 1 O Neil B H St John 1936 Dartmouth Castle and Other Defences of Dartmouth Haven Archaeologia 85 129 159 doi 10 1017 S0261340900015186 Pattison Paul 2009 Pendennis Castle and St Mawes Castle London UK English Heritage ISBN 978 1 85074 723 9 Stanfield Clarkson 1847 Stanfield s Coast Scenery A Series of Picturesque Views in the British Channel and on the Coast of France 2nd ed London UK Smith Elder and Co OCLC 55157203 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dartmouth Castle English Heritage visitors page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dartmouth Castle amp oldid 1137052529, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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