fbpx
Wikipedia

Sandsfoot Castle

Sandsfoot Castle, also known historically as Weymouth Castle, is an artillery fort constructed by Henry VIII near Weymouth, Dorset. It formed part of the King's Device programme to protect against invasion from France and the Holy Roman Empire, and defended the Weymouth Bay anchorage. The stone castle had an octagonal gun platform, linked to a residential blockhouse, and was completed by 1542 at a cost of £3,887. Earthwork defences were built around the landward side of the castle, probably in 1623. Sandsfoot saw service during the English Civil War, when it was held by Parliament and Royalists in turn during the conflict. It survived the interregnum but, following Charles II's restoration to the throne, the fortress was withdrawn from military use in 1665.

Sandsfoot Castle
Weymouth, England
The castle overlooking the cliffs, 1998
Sandsfoot Castle
Coordinates50°35′43″N 2°27′39″W / 50.595222°N 2.460822°W / 50.595222; -2.460822
TypeDevice Fort
Site information
OwnerWeymouth and Portland Borough Council
Open to
the public
No
ConditionRuined
Site history
MaterialsPortland stone
EventsEnglish Civil War
Official nameSandsfoot Castle
Designated15 May 1953
Reference no.1020062
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameSandsfoot Castle
Designated12 December 1953
Reference no.1096763

By the early 18th century, Sandsfoot was in ruins, its stonework taken for use in local building projects. The clay cliffs on which the castle had been built had always been unstable and subject to erosion. The castle's gun platform began to collapse into the sea and, by the 1950s, had been entirely destroyed. The ruins were closed to visitors on safety grounds, although civic gardens were planted alongside it in 1951. Repairs were undertaken between 2009 and 2012 at a total cost of £217,800, enabling the site to be reopened to the public. Historic England considers Sandsfoot to be "one of the most substantial examples" of the 16th-century blockhouses to survive in England.[1] The ruins were once again closed to visitors on safety grounds in January 2021.[2] It remains closed to the public as of August 2022.

History Edit

16th century Edit

Sandsfoot Castle was built as a consequence of international tensions between England, France and the Holy Roman Empire in the final years of the reign of King Henry VIII. Traditionally the Crown had left coastal defences to the local lords and communities, only taking a modest role in building and maintaining fortifications, and while France and the Empire remained in conflict with one another, maritime raids were common but an actual invasion of England seemed unlikely.[3] Modest defences, based around simple blockhouses and towers, existed in the south-west and along the Sussex coast, with a few more impressive works in the north of England, but in general the fortifications were very limited in scale.[4]

 
The interior of Sandsfoot Castle in 2008, showing ashlar-faced (left) and rubble stone walls (right)

After 1533, Henry broke with popes Pope Clement VII and Paul III in order to annul the long-standing marriage to his wife, Catherine of Aragon, and remarry.[5] Catherine was the aunt of Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor, and Charles took the annulment as a personal insult.[6] This resulted in France and the Empire declaring an alliance against Henry in 1538, and the Pope encouraging the two countries to attack England.[7] An invasion of England appeared certain.[8] In response, Henry issued an order, called a "device", in 1539, giving instructions for the "defence of the realm in time of invasion" and the construction of forts along the English coastline.[9]

Sandsfoot Castle was built to protect the Weymouth Bay anchorage, being placed on cliffs overlooking the waterway, opposite Portland Castle on the other side.[10] Sandsfoot was a blockhouse, intended to defeat enemy ships using a battery of heavy artillery, and had minimal protection against an attack from the land.[11] It was completed by 1541, run by a captain appointed by the Crown, and cost £3,887 to build.[12][a] There was probably an early agreement that the nearby village of Wyke Regis had a responsibility to support the castle, and in exchange they came to traditionally enjoy an exemption from taxes and militia duties.[14] The antiquarian John Leland visited the castle soon after its construction, describing it as "a right goodlie and warlyke castle" with "one open barbican", probably referring to the castle's gun platform.[15]

Coastal erosion quickly began to threaten the castle, causing what was reported as a "great gulf" on its seaward side, and repairs costing £383 were necessary by 1583[16][a], completed by John Wadham of Catherston, MP and Recorder for Weymouth and “Captain of the Queen’s Majestie at Sandesfoot Castle” who died in 1584.[17] During the invasion scare that accompanied the Spanish Armada of 1588, the normal garrison of Sandsfoot was supplemented by another 50 men.[18]

17th–19th centuries Edit

 
Engraving of the castle in 1756, showing the entrance gate-tower (left), the residential block (centre) and the gun platform (right)

Repairs were made to the castle between 1610 and 1611 by the captain, Sir George Bampfield, at a cost of £211.[19][a] A survey in 1623 carried out by Sir Richard Morryson showed the castle to be equipped with ten iron guns – one culverin, five demi-culverins, two sakers, a minion and a falcon – and garrisoned by its captain, five gunners and three soldiers.[20] It was in a poor condition, and one corner of the gun platform had been undermined by the sea; Morryson's team estimated the likely costs of repairs to amount to £459.[21][a]

During the English Civil War between the supporters of Charles I and Parliament, Weymouth was predominantly Parliamentarian in loyalty and the surrounding forts were held by their garrisons.[22] Robert Dormer, the Earl of Carnarvon, entered Dorset with an army in 1643 and Weymouth surrendered, resulting in Sandsfoot Castle being controlled by the Royalists between August 1643 and June 1644.[23] During this period the castle may have been used as a Royalist mint.[24][b] Robert Devereux, the Earl of Essex, then retook the county for Parliament; Colonel William Ashburnham, the Royalist governor of Weymouth, retreated to Portland Castle without a fight.[26] Devereux approached Sandsfoot and, after three hours of negotiations, the fort surrendered to him.[27] In 1647, Parliament ordered the garrison at the castle to be demobilised but this did not occur, and John Hayne was appointed as its new captain.[28]

Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 and the next year a fresh order was given to demobilise the garrison at Sandsfoot.[29] An argument then broke out between Humphrey Weld, the lieutenant-governor of Portland and captain of Sandsfoot Castle, and Charles Stewart, the Duke of Richmond, over the control of the local defences.[30] The village of Wyke Regis petitioned Weld in a bid to prevent the demobilisation, concerned that their traditional exemptions from militia service would be revoked by the Duke.[30] Weld championed their case but was dismissed from his post as lieutenant-governor, and the Duke occupied Sandsfoot with his militia.[31] Weld appealed to the government and in 1665 a compromise was announced in which Weld would be reappointed to his role as lieutenant-governor, while Sandsfoot would be declared redundant and be demolished.[30] The order for its destruction was never carried out, and the castle was used as a storehouse until at least 1691.[32]

 
The castle depicted in 1825

By 1725, the castle had become ruinous.[33] Early in the century, the remains of the castle was sold to the town of Weymouth, whose people reused some of the stone to construct their new town bridge.[34] Local tradition in the 19th century maintained that several houses in Weymouth were also constructed using stone taken from the castle.[35] In 1825, the carved stone Elizabethan arms of the castle were moved to All Saints Church in Wyke Regis.[36] Captains continued to be formally appointed, however, and Gabriel Stewart held the post as late as 1795.[37]

The majority of the gun platform collapsed into the sea as the cliffs eroded. It is uncertain precisely when this occurred; in a prolonged historical debate over this during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the historian Henry Symonds argued that the first falls occurred during the 18th century, W. Norman placed the main fall in 1835, and T. Groves argued in favour of a more recent collapse in the second half of the 19th century.[38] The ruined castle was drawn and painted by various artists in the 18th and 19th centuries, including Samuel Buck, J. H. Grimm, C. Sawyer and Edward Pritchard.[39] The castle featured in Joseph Drew's short novel "the Poisoned Cup" in 1876.[40]

20th–21st centuries Edit

 
Sandsfoot Gardens, with the castle in the distance

In 1902, the Weymouth Corporation purchased the castle for the town from the Department of Woods and Forests for a total of £150.[40][c] During the Second World War the castle housed an anti-aircraft battery as part of the defences created around Portland Harbour.[1] Despite the construction of the Portland breakwaters nearby, the unstable clay cliffs remained vulnerable to erosion; in 1930 the ruins were closed to the public due to safety concerns and the remaining embrasure of the gun platform collapsed in the 1950s.[42]

In 2009, £23,100 was awarded by the Heritage Lottery Fund for an initial survey of the site, which by now had been placed on English Heritage's register of listed buildings at risk of decline, followed by a further £194,700 in 2011 for substantial repair work.[43] As part of the work, a three-dimensional laser scan of the stonework was undertaken, and a steel and oak walkway was installed around the interior of the castle.[44] The castle reopened to the public in 2012, and the following year it was removed from English Heritage's at risk register.[45] The castle is protected under UK law as a grade II* listed building[1] and as a scheduled monument.[46]

The castle was once again closed to the public in 2021 after vertical cracks on an internal wall were found to have widened.[2] Permanent metal fencing now surrounds the castle preventing public access.

Architecture Edit

 
Plan of the original castle; A – gate-tower; B – residential blockhouse; C – gun platform

Sandsfoot Castle was built from Portland stone with ashlar facings and a rubble core.[47] It comprised a main blockhouse attached to an octagonal gun room, overlooking the sea.[48] The two-storey blockhouse is 42 by 32 feet (12.8 by 9.8 m) across, with a gate-tower on its landward side.[48] It probably originally had four rooms for the accommodation and cooking facilities for the garrison, with staircases leading up to the first floor and down into its basement.[49] The gate-tower held a small room on the first floor and was designed to hold a portcullis.[49] The one-storey gun room was approximately 36 by 28 feet (11.0 by 8.5 m) across with five embrasures for guns and a flat roof that also probably supported artillery. Both the gun room and the main block were probably protected by parapets.[49]

The gun room has been lost to erosion, although the south-western embrasure is still visible where it fell onto the beach below.[1] The ashlar facings of the blockhouse have been largely robbed, although some elements remain, and the roof and floors have been lost.[50] Historic England considers that the castle "represents one of the most substantial examples" of an unaltered 16th-century blockhouse in England.[1]

The castle originally had an outer ward, reached over a bridge, and stables, although these have been both been lost.[49] Protective rectangular earthworks were constructed to protect the castle on the landward side, probably in 1623, with two bastions in the north and west corners, and some form of stone structure along the earthworks.[48] In the 18th century these earthworks were described as forming a "deep trench" and mid-19th century accounts suggested that they were around 12 feet (3.7 m) deep.[51] Now only 100 feet (30 m) of the bank and ditch survives, with the earthworks approximately 10 metres (33 ft) wide overall and 2.2 metres (7 ft 3 in) deep between the top of the bank and the base of the ditch.[48] The north bastion still survives largely intact, although the west has been mostly destroyed.[49] Outside the entrance to the earthworks are the Sandsfoot Gardens, civic gardens dating from 1951, designed in a Tudor style with an ornamental pond.[52]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Comparing early modern costs and prices with those of the modern period is challenging. £3,887 in 1541 could be equivalent to between £1.9 million and £920 million in 2014, depending on the price comparison used. £383 in 1583 could equate to between £92,000 and £34 million; £211 in 1611 to between £30,000 and £11 million; £459 in 1623 to between £76,000 and £23 million. For comparison, the total royal expenditure on all the Device Forts across England between 1539–47 came to £376,500, with St Mawes and Sandgate Castle, for example, costing £5,018 and £5,584 apiece.[13]
  2. ^ The historian Henry Symonds presented an argument for the use of Sandsfoot as a mint on the basis of the labelling of coins from this period with an "SA", and their similarity to other coins struck at Weymouth during the Royalist control of the town. If the coins concerned were not struck at Sandsfoot, they were likely the product of the Salisbury mint. Symond argues that the mint's equipment may have been evacuated to Portland Castle when the Royalists left.[25]
  3. ^ Equivalent modern prices of early 20th century monetary sums depend on the index used to make the comparison. £150 in 1902 could equate to between £14,800 in 2014, if valued using the a GDP Deflator, or up to £142,000, if valued using a share of GDP.[41]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Historic England. "Sandsfoot Castle (1020062)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Weymouth's Sandsfoot Castle shut after cracks appear". BBC News. 20 January 2021. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  3. ^ Thompson 1987, p. 111; Hale 1983, p. 63
  4. ^ King 1991, pp. 176–177
  5. ^ Morley 1976, p. 7
  6. ^ Hale 1983, p. 63; Harrington 2007, p. 5
  7. ^ Morley 1976, p. 7; Hale 1983, pp. 63–64
  8. ^ Hale 1983, p. 66; Harrington 2007, p. 6
  9. ^ Harrington 2007, p. 11; Walton 2010, p. 70
  10. ^ Saunders 1989, p. 40; RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015
  11. ^ Saunders 1989, p. 40; RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015
  12. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle Remains", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015; Symonds 1914, p. 27
  13. ^ Biddle et al. 2001, p. 12; Harrington 2007, p. 8; Lawrence H. Officer; Samuel H. Williamson (2014), "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1270 to Present", MeasuringWorth, retrieved 27 December 2015
  14. ^ Symonds 1914, pp. 32–33; Norrey 1988, p. 794
  15. ^ Groves 1879, pp. 20, 22
  16. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; Groves 1879, p. 29; Symonds 1914, p. 30
  17. ^ From the funeral brass of John Wadham in the Church of St Candida and Holy Cross at Whitchurch Canonicorum
  18. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 28
  19. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; Symonds 1914, p. 30
  20. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; Symonds 1914, p. 31
  21. ^ Symonds 1914, pp. 31–32
  22. ^ Barrett 1910, p. 206
  23. ^ Barrett 1910, pp. 206–207
  24. ^ Symonds 1913, pp. 121–122
  25. ^ Symonds 1913, pp. 120–122
  26. ^ Barrett 1910, pp. 208–209
  27. ^ Barrett 1910, p. 209
  28. ^ Ellis 1829, pp. 88–89
  29. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 32
  30. ^ a b c Norrey 1988, p. 474
  31. ^ Symonds 1914, pp. 32–33; Norrey 1988, p. 474
  32. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 33; RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015
  33. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 33
  34. ^ Bellamy, Pinder & Le Pard 2011, p. 34
  35. ^ Groves 1879, p. 23
  36. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 30
  37. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 34
  38. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 33; Groves 1879, pp. 22–23; Norman 1920, p. 34
  39. ^ Symonds 1914, p. 34; RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "The Old Castle, Sandsfoot, Weymouth, Dorset", Art UK, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle and Portland, Dorset", Art UK, retrieved 27 December 2015
  40. ^ a b "History of Sandsfoot or Weymouth Castle", Sandsfoot Castle & The Rodwell Trail, retrieved 27 December 2015
  41. ^ Lawrence H. Officer; Samuel H. Williamson (2014), "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1270 to Present", MeasuringWorth, retrieved 27 December 2015
  42. ^ "Sandsfoot Castle", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Gardens", Dorset Councils Online, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Heritage at Risk 2012: South West" (PDF), English Heritage, p. 172, retrieved 27 December 2015
  43. ^ "Restoration Hope for Castle Ruin", BBC News, 21 December 2009, retrieved 26 December 2015; "BBC News – Lottery cash for crumbling Sandsfoot Castle in Weymouth", BBC News, 6 January 2011, retrieved 26 December 2015
  44. ^ "Oak Walkway by Levitate Inserted into Ruined Castle", De Zeen Magazine, 4 March 2014, retrieved 27 December 2015; Barber, Mills & Andrews 2011, pp. 28–29
  45. ^ "Sandsfoot Gardens", Dorset Councils Online, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Dorset Heritage Site Saved But More at Risk", Wessex FM, 10 October 2013, retrieved 27 December 2015
  46. ^ "Sandsfoot Castle, Non Civil Parish - 1020062 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  47. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle Remains", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015
  48. ^ a b c d RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015
  49. ^ a b c d e RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015
  50. ^ "Sandsfoot Castle Remains", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle". Historic England. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  51. ^ RCHME (1970), "An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset, Volume 2, South East", British History Online, pp. 330–374, retrieved 27 December 2015; "Sandsfoot Castle", Historic England, retrieved 27 December 2015; Anonymous n.d., pp. 41–42; Anonymous 1785, p. 48
  52. ^ "Sandsfoot Gardens", Dorset Councils Online, retrieved 27 December 2015; "History of Sandsfoot or Weymouth Castle", Sandsfoot Castle & The Rodwell Trail, retrieved 27 December 2015

Bibliography Edit

  • Anonymous (n.d.). A Guide Book to Weymouth and Melcombe Regis, with the Adjacent Villages and the Island of Portland. Weymouth, UK: A. A. Adey. OCLC 504005832.
  • Anonymous (1785). The Weymouth Guide: Exhibiting the Ancient and Present State of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis. Weymouth, UK: n.p. OCLC 316773470.
  • Barber, David; Mills, Jon; Andrews, David (2011). 3D Laser Scanning for Heritage: Advice and Guidance to Users on Laser Scanning in Archaeology and Architecture (2nd ed.). Swindon, UK: English Heritage.
  • Barrett, W. Bowles (1910). "Weymouth and Melcombe Regis in the Time of the Great Civil War". Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club. 31: 204–229.
  • Bellamy, Peter; Pinder, Claire; Le Pard, Gordon (2011). Weymouth: Historic Urban Characterisation. Dorchester, UK: Dorset County Council and English Heritage.
  • Biddle, Martin; Hiller, Jonathon; Scott, Ian; Streeten, Anthony (2001). Henry VIII's Coastal Artillery Fort at Camber Castle, Rye, East Sussex: An Archaeological Structural and Historical Investigation. Oxford, UK: Oxbow Books. ISBN 0904220230.
  • Ellis, George Alfred (1829). The History and Antiquities of the Borough and Town of Weymouth and Melcombe. London, UK: Baldwin and Craddock. OCLC 225033766.
  • Groves, T. B. (1879). "Notes on Sandsfoot Castle". Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club. 3: 20–24.
  • Hale, John R. (1983). Renaissance War Studies. London, UK: Hambledon Press. ISBN 0907628176.
  • Harrington, Peter (2007). The Castles of Henry VIII. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781472803801.
  • King, D. J. Cathcart (1991). The Castle in England and Wales: An Interpretative History. London, UK: Routledge Press. ISBN 9780415003506.
  • Morley, B. M. (1976). Henry VIII and the Development of Coastal Defence. London, UK: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 0116707771.
  • Norman, W. C. (1920). "Sandsfoot Castle, Weymouth". Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club. 41: 34–38.
  • Norrey, P. J. (1988). "The Restoration Regime in Action: The Relationship between Central and Local Government in Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire, 1660–1678". The Historical Journal. 31 (4): 789–812. doi:10.1017/s0018246x0001551x.
  • Saunders, Andrew (1989). Fortress Britain: Artillery Fortifications in the British Isles and Ireland. Liphook, UK: Beaufort. ISBN 1855120003.
  • Symonds, Henry (1913). "Are the Coins of Charles I Bearing the Letters "SA" Correctly Assigned to a Mint at Salisbury?". The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Royal Numismatic Society. 13: 119–122.
  • Symonds, Henry (1914). "Sandsfoot and Portland Castles". Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club. 35: 27–40.
  • Thompson, M. W. (1987). The Decline of the Castle. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1854226088.
  • Walton, Steven A. (2010). "State Building Through Building for the State: Foreign and Domestic Expertise in Tudor Fortification". Osiris. 25 (1): 66–84. doi:10.1086/657263. S2CID 144384757.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Sandsfoot Castle at Wikimedia Commons
  • Sandsfoot Castle and the Rodwell Trail website

sandsfoot, castle, also, known, historically, weymouth, castle, artillery, fort, constructed, henry, viii, near, weymouth, dorset, formed, part, king, device, programme, protect, against, invasion, from, france, holy, roman, empire, defended, weymouth, anchora. Sandsfoot Castle also known historically as Weymouth Castle is an artillery fort constructed by Henry VIII near Weymouth Dorset It formed part of the King s Device programme to protect against invasion from France and the Holy Roman Empire and defended the Weymouth Bay anchorage The stone castle had an octagonal gun platform linked to a residential blockhouse and was completed by 1542 at a cost of 3 887 Earthwork defences were built around the landward side of the castle probably in 1623 Sandsfoot saw service during the English Civil War when it was held by Parliament and Royalists in turn during the conflict It survived the interregnum but following Charles II s restoration to the throne the fortress was withdrawn from military use in 1665 Sandsfoot CastleWeymouth EnglandThe castle overlooking the cliffs 1998Sandsfoot CastleCoordinates50 35 43 N 2 27 39 W 50 595222 N 2 460822 W 50 595222 2 460822TypeDevice FortSite informationOwnerWeymouth and Portland Borough CouncilOpen tothe publicNoConditionRuinedSite historyMaterialsPortland stoneEventsEnglish Civil WarScheduled monumentOfficial nameSandsfoot CastleDesignated15 May 1953Reference no 1020062Listed Building Grade II Official nameSandsfoot CastleDesignated12 December 1953Reference no 1096763By the early 18th century Sandsfoot was in ruins its stonework taken for use in local building projects The clay cliffs on which the castle had been built had always been unstable and subject to erosion The castle s gun platform began to collapse into the sea and by the 1950s had been entirely destroyed The ruins were closed to visitors on safety grounds although civic gardens were planted alongside it in 1951 Repairs were undertaken between 2009 and 2012 at a total cost of 217 800 enabling the site to be reopened to the public Historic England considers Sandsfoot to be one of the most substantial examples of the 16th century blockhouses to survive in England 1 The ruins were once again closed to visitors on safety grounds in January 2021 2 It remains closed to the public as of August 2022 update Contents 1 History 1 1 16th century 1 2 17th 19th centuries 1 3 20th 21st centuries 2 Architecture 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory Edit16th century Edit Sandsfoot Castle was built as a consequence of international tensions between England France and the Holy Roman Empire in the final years of the reign of King Henry VIII Traditionally the Crown had left coastal defences to the local lords and communities only taking a modest role in building and maintaining fortifications and while France and the Empire remained in conflict with one another maritime raids were common but an actual invasion of England seemed unlikely 3 Modest defences based around simple blockhouses and towers existed in the south west and along the Sussex coast with a few more impressive works in the north of England but in general the fortifications were very limited in scale 4 The interior of Sandsfoot Castle in 2008 showing ashlar faced left and rubble stone walls right After 1533 Henry broke with popes Pope Clement VII and Paul III in order to annul the long standing marriage to his wife Catherine of Aragon and remarry 5 Catherine was the aunt of Charles V the Holy Roman Emperor and Charles took the annulment as a personal insult 6 This resulted in France and the Empire declaring an alliance against Henry in 1538 and the Pope encouraging the two countries to attack England 7 An invasion of England appeared certain 8 In response Henry issued an order called a device in 1539 giving instructions for the defence of the realm in time of invasion and the construction of forts along the English coastline 9 Sandsfoot Castle was built to protect the Weymouth Bay anchorage being placed on cliffs overlooking the waterway opposite Portland Castle on the other side 10 Sandsfoot was a blockhouse intended to defeat enemy ships using a battery of heavy artillery and had minimal protection against an attack from the land 11 It was completed by 1541 run by a captain appointed by the Crown and cost 3 887 to build 12 a There was probably an early agreement that the nearby village of Wyke Regis had a responsibility to support the castle and in exchange they came to traditionally enjoy an exemption from taxes and militia duties 14 The antiquarian John Leland visited the castle soon after its construction describing it as a right goodlie and warlyke castle with one open barbican probably referring to the castle s gun platform 15 Coastal erosion quickly began to threaten the castle causing what was reported as a great gulf on its seaward side and repairs costing 383 were necessary by 1583 16 a completed by John Wadham of Catherston MP and Recorder for Weymouth and Captain of the Queen s Majestie at Sandesfoot Castle who died in 1584 17 During the invasion scare that accompanied the Spanish Armada of 1588 the normal garrison of Sandsfoot was supplemented by another 50 men 18 17th 19th centuries Edit Engraving of the castle in 1756 showing the entrance gate tower left the residential block centre and the gun platform right Repairs were made to the castle between 1610 and 1611 by the captain Sir George Bampfield at a cost of 211 19 a A survey in 1623 carried out by Sir Richard Morryson showed the castle to be equipped with ten iron guns one culverin five demi culverins two sakers a minion and a falcon and garrisoned by its captain five gunners and three soldiers 20 It was in a poor condition and one corner of the gun platform had been undermined by the sea Morryson s team estimated the likely costs of repairs to amount to 459 21 a During the English Civil War between the supporters of Charles I and Parliament Weymouth was predominantly Parliamentarian in loyalty and the surrounding forts were held by their garrisons 22 Robert Dormer the Earl of Carnarvon entered Dorset with an army in 1643 and Weymouth surrendered resulting in Sandsfoot Castle being controlled by the Royalists between August 1643 and June 1644 23 During this period the castle may have been used as a Royalist mint 24 b Robert Devereux the Earl of Essex then retook the county for Parliament Colonel William Ashburnham the Royalist governor of Weymouth retreated to Portland Castle without a fight 26 Devereux approached Sandsfoot and after three hours of negotiations the fort surrendered to him 27 In 1647 Parliament ordered the garrison at the castle to be demobilised but this did not occur and John Hayne was appointed as its new captain 28 Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 and the next year a fresh order was given to demobilise the garrison at Sandsfoot 29 An argument then broke out between Humphrey Weld the lieutenant governor of Portland and captain of Sandsfoot Castle and Charles Stewart the Duke of Richmond over the control of the local defences 30 The village of Wyke Regis petitioned Weld in a bid to prevent the demobilisation concerned that their traditional exemptions from militia service would be revoked by the Duke 30 Weld championed their case but was dismissed from his post as lieutenant governor and the Duke occupied Sandsfoot with his militia 31 Weld appealed to the government and in 1665 a compromise was announced in which Weld would be reappointed to his role as lieutenant governor while Sandsfoot would be declared redundant and be demolished 30 The order for its destruction was never carried out and the castle was used as a storehouse until at least 1691 32 The castle depicted in 1825By 1725 the castle had become ruinous 33 Early in the century the remains of the castle was sold to the town of Weymouth whose people reused some of the stone to construct their new town bridge 34 Local tradition in the 19th century maintained that several houses in Weymouth were also constructed using stone taken from the castle 35 In 1825 the carved stone Elizabethan arms of the castle were moved to All Saints Church in Wyke Regis 36 Captains continued to be formally appointed however and Gabriel Stewart held the post as late as 1795 37 The majority of the gun platform collapsed into the sea as the cliffs eroded It is uncertain precisely when this occurred in a prolonged historical debate over this during the late 19th and early 20th centuries the historian Henry Symonds argued that the first falls occurred during the 18th century W Norman placed the main fall in 1835 and T Groves argued in favour of a more recent collapse in the second half of the 19th century 38 The ruined castle was drawn and painted by various artists in the 18th and 19th centuries including Samuel Buck J H Grimm C Sawyer and Edward Pritchard 39 The castle featured in Joseph Drew s short novel the Poisoned Cup in 1876 40 20th 21st centuries Edit Sandsfoot Gardens with the castle in the distanceIn 1902 the Weymouth Corporation purchased the castle for the town from the Department of Woods and Forests for a total of 150 40 c During the Second World War the castle housed an anti aircraft battery as part of the defences created around Portland Harbour 1 Despite the construction of the Portland breakwaters nearby the unstable clay cliffs remained vulnerable to erosion in 1930 the ruins were closed to the public due to safety concerns and the remaining embrasure of the gun platform collapsed in the 1950s 42 In 2009 23 100 was awarded by the Heritage Lottery Fund for an initial survey of the site which by now had been placed on English Heritage s register of listed buildings at risk of decline followed by a further 194 700 in 2011 for substantial repair work 43 As part of the work a three dimensional laser scan of the stonework was undertaken and a steel and oak walkway was installed around the interior of the castle 44 The castle reopened to the public in 2012 and the following year it was removed from English Heritage s at risk register 45 The castle is protected under UK law as a grade II listed building 1 and as a scheduled monument 46 The castle was once again closed to the public in 2021 after vertical cracks on an internal wall were found to have widened 2 Permanent metal fencing now surrounds the castle preventing public access Architecture Edit Plan of the original castle A gate tower B residential blockhouse C gun platformSandsfoot Castle was built from Portland stone with ashlar facings and a rubble core 47 It comprised a main blockhouse attached to an octagonal gun room overlooking the sea 48 The two storey blockhouse is 42 by 32 feet 12 8 by 9 8 m across with a gate tower on its landward side 48 It probably originally had four rooms for the accommodation and cooking facilities for the garrison with staircases leading up to the first floor and down into its basement 49 The gate tower held a small room on the first floor and was designed to hold a portcullis 49 The one storey gun room was approximately 36 by 28 feet 11 0 by 8 5 m across with five embrasures for guns and a flat roof that also probably supported artillery Both the gun room and the main block were probably protected by parapets 49 The gun room has been lost to erosion although the south western embrasure is still visible where it fell onto the beach below 1 The ashlar facings of the blockhouse have been largely robbed although some elements remain and the roof and floors have been lost 50 Historic England considers that the castle represents one of the most substantial examples of an unaltered 16th century blockhouse in England 1 The castle originally had an outer ward reached over a bridge and stables although these have been both been lost 49 Protective rectangular earthworks were constructed to protect the castle on the landward side probably in 1623 with two bastions in the north and west corners and some form of stone structure along the earthworks 48 In the 18th century these earthworks were described as forming a deep trench and mid 19th century accounts suggested that they were around 12 feet 3 7 m deep 51 Now only 100 feet 30 m of the bank and ditch survives with the earthworks approximately 10 metres 33 ft wide overall and 2 2 metres 7 ft 3 in deep between the top of the bank and the base of the ditch 48 The north bastion still survives largely intact although the west has been mostly destroyed 49 Outside the entrance to the earthworks are the Sandsfoot Gardens civic gardens dating from 1951 designed in a Tudor style with an ornamental pond 52 See also EditCastles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in EnglandNotes Edit a b c d Comparing early modern costs and prices with those of the modern period is challenging 3 887 in 1541 could be equivalent to between 1 9 million and 920 million in 2014 depending on the price comparison used 383 in 1583 could equate to between 92 000 and 34 million 211 in 1611 to between 30 000 and 11 million 459 in 1623 to between 76 000 and 23 million For comparison the total royal expenditure on all the Device Forts across England between 1539 47 came to 376 500 with St Mawes and Sandgate Castle for example costing 5 018 and 5 584 apiece 13 The historian Henry Symonds presented an argument for the use of Sandsfoot as a mint on the basis of the labelling of coins from this period with an SA and their similarity to other coins struck at Weymouth during the Royalist control of the town If the coins concerned were not struck at Sandsfoot they were likely the product of the Salisbury mint Symond argues that the mint s equipment may have been evacuated to Portland Castle when the Royalists left 25 Equivalent modern prices of early 20th century monetary sums depend on the index used to make the comparison 150 in 1902 could equate to between 14 800 in 2014 if valued using the a GDP Deflator or up to 142 000 if valued using a share of GDP 41 References Edit a b c d e Historic England Sandsfoot Castle 1020062 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 23 July 2020 a b Weymouth s Sandsfoot Castle shut after cracks appear BBC News 20 January 2021 Retrieved 20 August 2022 Thompson 1987 p 111 Hale 1983 p 63 King 1991 pp 176 177 Morley 1976 p 7 Hale 1983 p 63 Harrington 2007 p 5 Morley 1976 p 7 Hale 1983 pp 63 64 Hale 1983 p 66 Harrington 2007 p 6 Harrington 2007 p 11 Walton 2010 p 70 Saunders 1989 p 40 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 Saunders 1989 p 40 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Remains Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 Symonds 1914 p 27 Biddle et al 2001 p 12 Harrington 2007 p 8 Lawrence H Officer Samuel H Williamson 2014 Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount 1270 to Present MeasuringWorth retrieved 27 December 2015 Symonds 1914 pp 32 33 Norrey 1988 p 794 Groves 1879 pp 20 22 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Groves 1879 p 29 Symonds 1914 p 30 From the funeral brass of John Wadham in the Church of St Candida and Holy Cross at Whitchurch Canonicorum Symonds 1914 p 28 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Symonds 1914 p 30 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Symonds 1914 p 31 Symonds 1914 pp 31 32 Barrett 1910 p 206 Barrett 1910 pp 206 207 Symonds 1913 pp 121 122 Symonds 1913 pp 120 122 Barrett 1910 pp 208 209 Barrett 1910 p 209 Ellis 1829 pp 88 89 Symonds 1914 p 32 a b c Norrey 1988 p 474 Symonds 1914 pp 32 33 Norrey 1988 p 474 Symonds 1914 p 33 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Symonds 1914 p 33 Bellamy Pinder amp Le Pard 2011 p 34 Groves 1879 p 23 Symonds 1914 p 30 Symonds 1914 p 34 Symonds 1914 p 33 Groves 1879 pp 22 23 Norman 1920 p 34 Symonds 1914 p 34 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 The Old Castle Sandsfoot Weymouth Dorset Art UK retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle and Portland Dorset Art UK retrieved 27 December 2015 a b History of Sandsfoot or Weymouth Castle Sandsfoot Castle amp The Rodwell Trail retrieved 27 December 2015 Lawrence H Officer Samuel H Williamson 2014 Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount 1270 to Present MeasuringWorth retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Gardens Dorset Councils Online retrieved 27 December 2015 Heritage at Risk 2012 South West PDF English Heritage p 172 retrieved 27 December 2015 Restoration Hope for Castle Ruin BBC News 21 December 2009 retrieved 26 December 2015 BBC News Lottery cash for crumbling Sandsfoot Castle in Weymouth BBC News 6 January 2011 retrieved 26 December 2015 Oak Walkway by Levitate Inserted into Ruined Castle De Zeen Magazine 4 March 2014 retrieved 27 December 2015 Barber Mills amp Andrews 2011 pp 28 29 Sandsfoot Gardens Dorset Councils Online retrieved 27 December 2015 Dorset Heritage Site Saved But More at Risk Wessex FM 10 October 2013 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Non Civil Parish 1020062 Historic England historicengland org uk Retrieved 25 April 2022 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Remains Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 a b c d RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 a b c d e RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Remains Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Historic England Retrieved 27 December 2015 RCHME 1970 An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset Volume 2 South East British History Online pp 330 374 retrieved 27 December 2015 Sandsfoot Castle Historic England retrieved 27 December 2015 Anonymous n d pp 41 42 Anonymous 1785 p 48 Sandsfoot Gardens Dorset Councils Online retrieved 27 December 2015 History of Sandsfoot or Weymouth Castle Sandsfoot Castle amp The Rodwell Trail retrieved 27 December 2015Bibliography EditAnonymous n d A Guide Book to Weymouth and Melcombe Regis with the Adjacent Villages and the Island of Portland Weymouth UK A A Adey OCLC 504005832 Anonymous 1785 The Weymouth Guide Exhibiting the Ancient and Present State of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis Weymouth UK n p OCLC 316773470 Barber David Mills Jon Andrews David 2011 3D Laser Scanning for Heritage Advice and Guidance to Users on Laser Scanning in Archaeology and Architecture 2nd ed Swindon UK English Heritage Barrett W Bowles 1910 Weymouth and Melcombe Regis in the Time of the Great Civil War Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club 31 204 229 Bellamy Peter Pinder Claire Le Pard Gordon 2011 Weymouth Historic Urban Characterisation Dorchester UK Dorset County Council and English Heritage Biddle Martin Hiller Jonathon Scott Ian Streeten Anthony 2001 Henry VIII s Coastal Artillery Fort at Camber Castle Rye East Sussex An Archaeological Structural and Historical Investigation Oxford UK Oxbow Books ISBN 0904220230 Ellis George Alfred 1829 The History and Antiquities of the Borough and Town of Weymouth and Melcombe London UK Baldwin and Craddock OCLC 225033766 Groves T B 1879 Notes on Sandsfoot Castle Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club 3 20 24 Hale John R 1983 Renaissance War Studies London UK Hambledon Press ISBN 0907628176 Harrington Peter 2007 The Castles of Henry VIII Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 9781472803801 King D J Cathcart 1991 The Castle in England and Wales An Interpretative History London UK Routledge Press ISBN 9780415003506 Morley B M 1976 Henry VIII and the Development of Coastal Defence London UK Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 0116707771 Norman W C 1920 Sandsfoot Castle Weymouth Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club 41 34 38 Norrey P J 1988 The Restoration Regime in Action The Relationship between Central and Local Government in Dorset Somerset and Wiltshire 1660 1678 The Historical Journal 31 4 789 812 doi 10 1017 s0018246x0001551x Saunders Andrew 1989 Fortress Britain Artillery Fortifications in the British Isles and Ireland Liphook UK Beaufort ISBN 1855120003 Symonds Henry 1913 Are the Coins of Charles I Bearing the Letters SA Correctly Assigned to a Mint at Salisbury The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Royal Numismatic Society 13 119 122 Symonds Henry 1914 Sandsfoot and Portland Castles Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club 35 27 40 Thompson M W 1987 The Decline of the Castle Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 1854226088 Walton Steven A 2010 State Building Through Building for the State Foreign and Domestic Expertise in Tudor Fortification Osiris 25 1 66 84 doi 10 1086 657263 S2CID 144384757 External links Edit Media related to Sandsfoot Castle at Wikimedia Commons Sandsfoot Castle and the Rodwell Trail website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandsfoot Castle amp oldid 1105564947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.