Hurst Castle
Hurst Castle | |
Hampshire | |
---|---|
Hurst Castle, Hampshire | |
Type: | Device fort |
Location | |
Location: | 50°42’23"N, 1°33’4"W |
History | |
Built 1541 – 1544 | |
Information | |
Condition: | Survives with many later modifications |
Owned by: | English Heritage |
Hurst Castle in stands on the south coast of mainland Hampshire. It is one of Henry VIII's 'Device Forts', built to guard the approaches to Southampton as part of King Henry's chain of coastal defences to protect England during the turbulent times of his reign.
Hurst Castle stands at the end of a long shingle spit at the west end of the Solent and was sited at this narrow entrance to the Solent where the ebb and flow of the tides creates strong currents, putting would-be invaders at its mercy.
King Charles I was imprisoned here in 1648 before being taken to London to his trial and execution. The fort was modified throughout the 19th century, and two large wing batteries were built to house heavy guns. It was fortified again in Second World War and then decommissioned. It is now owned by English Heritage and is open to the public.
History
Hurst Castle is a fort consisting of a circular stone tower strengthened by semicircular bastions of later dates.[1] It was erected by Henry VIII to defend the approach to Southampton Water against the French.[1] The recommendation that a castle be built on Hurst Point was made in 1539 by William FitzWilliam, 1st Earl of Southampton and William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester.[2] By 1540 some kind of fortification existed but details are scant.[2] The work on the castle proper took several years and was finished by the end of 1544. The first captain of the castle was Thomas Bertie.[1] In 1561 Thomas Carew was captain. The establishment at that time consisted of the captain, his deputy, porter and a master gunner, a "deputy's man," eight soldiers, another for the porter and eleven gunners.[1] Thomas Carew was succeeded on his death by Sir Thomas Gorges, who in 1593 petitioned for the repair of the platforms, which were so decayed as to be incapable of supporting the guns.[1] Sir Edward Gorges, afterwards Baron Gorges of Dundalk, succeeded his father as captain in 1610.[1]
The castle seems to have continued in a somewhat inefficient state, and in 1628 when the porter was ordered to stay a ship, though he was "very willing" he "had neither powder nor shot to do it with, and of his twenty-seven pieces of ordnance not above four or five would do any service, and they but for a shot or two."[1] In 1635 most of the bronze ordnance in the castle was exchanged for iron.[1]
At the beginning of the Civil War in 1642, the castle was occupied, in the absence of the captain, by Captain Richard Swanley on behalf of the Parliamentary forces. It was the last prison of the King before being moved to Windsor prior to his trial; he was brought here on the last day of November 1648 from Newport.[1] Lord Gorges was succeeded in the captaincy by Colonel Thomas Eyre, who in 1650 secured a grant of further ordnance and an increase in the number of soldiers stationed there.[1]
In the year following the Restoration, Colonel Eyre lost his post, and Edward Strange was appointed captain, the office of governor being allowed to lapse.[1] In January 1661 Charles II ordered the garrison to be disbanded and an estimate made of the expense of demolishing the castle; the latter idea was, however, speedily dropped, and five months later, although the forces were paid off, arrangements were made for additions involving an increase in the annual expenditure.[1] In 1666 it was decided that the castle should be garrisoned by men from Sir Robert Holmes's company on the Isle of Wight.[1] This was not done until 1671 owing to the state of disrepair in which the castle was. Sir Robert, who was governor of the Island, reported that there was scarcely a gun mounted and no stores or provisions in the castle; nothing, however, was done, and three years later he wrote complaining that there was hardly a room not fallen in and into which the rain did not come. Repairs were then taken in hand and the garrison established, Captain Strange becoming governor.[1] In 1675 a master gunner and three other gunners were added to the establishment, there being then nearly thirty guns mounted at the castle. In the same year Sir John Holmes petitioned for leave to purchase the governorship, and this being granted him he was appointed to the post.[1] Captain Roach, who was captain of the castle at this time, having murdered a certain Lieutenant Newman, fled to Yarmouth, and borrowing a black cloak took boat to Hurst, where he was arrested.[1] In 1689 Henry Holmes was appointed to the captaincy.[1]
18th century
On 8 May 1700, the Privy Council ordered that Hurst Castle be used as a prison for priests convicted of fostering the growth of Popery.[3] On 26 September a Franciscan, Father Paul (Matthew) Atkinson, was convicted and sent to Hurst where he remained nearly 30 years, before dying in 1729.[3] Atkinson seems to have been the only priest ever sent to Hurst, although the Privy Council Register entry for 1719 claims that another priest, Anthony de la Porte, was, at least, supposed to have been sent to Hurst Castle.[4]
By the latter 18th century, Hurst Castle had become neglected to such an extent that it was being used as a rendezvous for smugglers led by a notorious character by the name of John Streeter.[5] William Arnold, Collector of Customs at Cowes, considered it necessary in 1783 to request "a King's cutter also in Hurst Road ... to keep off the large cutters from landing their goods for three or four days at a time ... to ruin the Trade, because the expense of keeping a large number of men and horses collected together waiting the arrival of goods must materially diminish the profits arising from their sale."[6] At the end of the 18th century, the first steps to refortification were begun, when earth-protected gun batteries were added.[7]
19th century
The fort's tower was rebuilt around 1805/6,[8] when it was vaulted to support six 24-pounder guns,[7] during the Napoleonic Wars. In the 1850s the dock was built as well as the west battery.[8] Recommendations by the Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom (1859)[9] led to the castle's being refortified, and two large wing batteries were built to house 30 heavy guns.[8] In 1873 a new east wing was built and a new entrance to the castle was driven through the northeast bastion.[8] Around 1889 the magazine roof was reinforced with more concrete; the staircases and rooms within the tower were rebuilt; and the tower roof was adapted for modern gun mountings.[8] A coastal battery was built in 1893.[8]
20th century
By December 1902 the battery was armed with three 12-pounder and three 6-pounder quick-firing guns and ten 12.5-inch and fifteen 10-inch rifle muzzle-loading (RML) weapons.[9] In 1905 the RML and 6-pounder guns were removed from the armament.[9] The battery was closed in 1928,[9] but the castle was retained by the War Office until 1933 and then handed over to the Ministry of Works.[8]
The fort was recommissioned again for Second World War.[9] By 1941 it was armed with two 12-pounder and two 6-pounder quick-firing guns.[9] Soldiers were stationed at Hurst Castle, and wall paintings have been found in the west wing battery which was used as a theatre.[8] By 1947 the battery was equipped only with two 6-pounder guns.[9]
The castle is now owned by English Heritage and is opened to the public.
Lighthouses
The first lighthouse at Hurst was the Hurst Tower, sited to the south west of Hurst Castle, and lit for the first time on 29 September 1786.[10] An additional and higher light - the High Lighthouse - was constructed in 1812.[10]
These lighthouses were dismantled and replaced by two new lighthouses built in the 1860s.[8] The first was the "Low Light" built into the rear wall of the west wing of the castle, which was superseded by the adjacent iron lighthouse in 1911.[8] The second lighthouse was the "High Light" – the free standing Hurst Point Lighthouse built on the end of Hurst Spit between 1865 and 1867.[8]
Geography
Hurst Spit is a barrier beach which shelters an area of saltmarsh and mud flats known as Keyhaven and Pennington marshes.[11] The spit formed from loose flint pebbles which had been eroded from the cliffs further west.[11] Modern sea defences along this stretch of coast have reduced the natural supply of pebbles to the extent that in 1989 the spit was so weakened that it was danger of being permanently breached.[11] A stabilisation scheme which took place in 1996-7 rebuilt the shingle bank using dredged shingle.[11] The distance across the Solent to the Isle of Wight is only three-quarters of a mile, but the sea between is very deep and the tide rushes past with great force.[1]
Today, the castle can be accessed on foot along the shingle spit from the nearby village of Milford on Sea or by frequent ferry service from Keyhaven.
Wildlife
The area has become a popular destination for many species of birds and insects over the years. The fields are home to Cream-spot Tiger and Cinnabar Moth in early June, and the open paths serve as a location for the uncommon Glanville Fritillary which scarcely occurs here. Small Heath and Gatekeeper butterflies are noticeably abundant during late July.
The wetlands attract a variety of wading birds throughout the year with a peak in winter. Rock Pipit and Linnet are common all over the castle grounds, and Gannet and Little Tern are uncommonly but regularly seen flying nearby.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Hurst Castle) |
- Hurst Castle
- Hurst Castle - English Heritage
- National Monuments Record: No. 459358 – Hurst Castle
- Photographs and Information from Strolling Guides
- BBC 360 image
- Fort data sheet
- Hurst Castle Solar Powered GSM Web Camera
Henry VIII's Device Forts on the south coast |
---|
Kent: Sandown Castle • Deal Castle • Walmer Castle • Sandgate Castle • Sussex: Camber Castle • Hampshire: Southsea Castle • Hurst Castle • Calshot Castle • Cowes Castle • Yarmouth Castle • Netley Castle • St Andrew's Castle • Dorset: Portland Castle • Sandsfoot Castle • Cornwall: Pendennis Castle • St Mawes Castle |
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 Victoria County History of Hampshire (1911)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 James, Jude (1986). Hurst Castle An Illustrated history. Stanbridge: Dovecote Press. pp. 14-15. ISBN 0946159394.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 John Anthony Williams, (1968), Catholic recusancy in Wiltshire, 1660-1791, page 50. Catholic Record Society
- ↑ John Anthony Williams, (1968), Catholic recusancy in Wiltshire, 1660-1791, page 51. Catholic Record Society
- ↑ Geoffrey Morley, (1994), The smuggling war: the Government's fight against smuggling in the 18th and 19th centuries. page 98
- ↑ Guide-Book: Southern England - Southampton Water to Milford on Sea, Smuggler's Britain, retrieved 25 September 2012
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Bernard Lowry, (2008), Discovering Fortifications: From the Tudors to the Cold War, page 81. Osprey
- ↑ 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 National Monuments Record: No. 459358 – Hurst Castle
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 National Monuments Record: No. 1429138 – Hurst Battery
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Lighthouses, hurstcastle.co.uk, retrieved 23 July 2012
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Hurst Spit - Barrier Beach of the West Solent, Geology of the Wessex Coast. Retrieved: 17 April 2012
Books
- Goad, J. G. (1990). Hurst Castle, Hampshire. London: English Heritage (second edition). ISBN 1-85074-053-4
- Colvin, H. M. (ed) (1982). The History of the King's Works, Vol. IV, 1485–1600, Part II.
- Harrington, Peter (2007). The Castles of Henry VIII. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84603-130-4
- Morley, B. M. (1976). Henry VIII and the Development of Coastal Defence. London: H.M. Stationery Office. ISBN 0-11-670777-1