Portland Castle

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Portland Castle

Dorset

Uk dor portcastle.JPG
The entrance to Portland Castle
Type: Device fort
Location
Location: 50°34’6"N, 2°26’48"W
History
Built 1539–41
Key events: Civil War
First Anglo-Dutch War
Information
Condition: Intact
Owned by: English Heritage

Portland Castle is an artillery fort constructed by King Henry VIII on the Isle of Portland, Dorset, between 1539 and 1541. It formed part of the King's Device programme (the 'Device forts') to protect against invasion from France and the Holy Roman Empire. Potland Castle defended the Portland Roads anchorage.

It is a fan-shaped castle built from Portland stone, with a curved central tower and a gun battery, flanked by two angular wings. Shortly after its construction it was armed with eleven artillery pieces, intended for use against enemy shipping, operating in partnership with its sister castle of Sandsfoot Castle|Sandsfoot on the other side of the anchorage. During the Civil War, Portland was taken by the Royalist supporters of King Charles I, and then survived two sieges before finally surrendering to Parliament in 1646.

Portland continued in use as a fort until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, when it was converted into a private house. Fresh concerns over invasion led to the War Office taking it over once again in 1869, but the castle was not rearmed and was instead formed accommodation for more modern neighbouring fortifications. During the First and Second World Wars it was used as offices, accommodation and as an ordnance store.

In 1949, the War Office relinquished control, and in 1955 it was opened to the public by the state. In the 21st century it is managed by English Heritage and operated as a tourist attraction, receiving 22,207 visitors in 2010. Historic England consider the castle to form "one of the best preserved and best known examples" of King Henry's forts.[1]

History

Tudor foundation

The keep from Portland Harbour

Portland 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: in 1538 the two rivals allied to declare war on England. The national threat of invasion overturned the prior practice of leaving coastal defence to the coastal towns and lords.

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 coastline.[2] The new works were his 'device forts'.

Lord Russell concluded that two castles, Portland and Sandsfoot, should be constructed to protect Portland Harbour from naval attack.[3] Work began that summer. Much of the cost was paid for out of the proceeds of the recent Dissolution of the Monasteries. A survey between 1547 and 1548 reported that the castle was equipped with one brass demi-cannon, two brass demi-culverins, four breech-loading portpieces and four slings; it also held eight hagbushes–a type of early arquebus–along with twenty-three bows, twenty-nine bills and twelve pikes.

The threat of a French invasion passed, and peace was declared in 1558.[4] Attention shifted away from Portland, and a 1574 survey reported that the castle was in a poor condition, with similar concerns being repeated in 1583.[5] However under Queen Elizabeth I tensions with Spain grew and military attention focused on the threat to the south-western counties.[6] War broke out in 1585, and £228 was spent on renovating Portland Castle.[5] In 1596, the garrison still comprised a captain and 13 men.[5]

The keep (centre) and the Captain's House (left) seen from the courtyard

Under James I, peace returned and the coastal forts, included Portland, received little attention.[7] A 1623 survey reported that the castle was equipped with three culverins, nine demi-culverins and a saker, but that the fortifications had suffered badly from sea erosion and required extensive repairs.[8] Fourteen years later, the castle had 15 guns and a garrison of a captain and 12 men.[8]

The Civil War to the Victorians

When the Civil War broke out in 1642, Portland was initially controlled by Parliamentary forces.[9] The castle was captured in 1643 by a group of Royalists who gained access by pretending to be Parliamentary soldiers.[10] As the war turned against the King in the south-west, Parliamentary forces besieged the castle for four months in 1644, and once again the following year.[9] The castle finally surrendered to Vice-Admiral William Batten in April 1646.[9] It is uncertain why the castle, which was not easily defensible on the landward side, proved so difficult to take; the historian Peter Harrington has suggested that its low-lying position may have made it difficult for Parliament to bombard it from the sea.[11]

During the Interregnum, Portland Castle continued to be garrisoned and used a prison, with a unit of 103 men attached to it in 1651.[9]

The castle was used to defend the Portland Roads during the First Anglo-Dutch War of 1653, seeing action in a three-day long naval battle between English and Dutch forces.[9] When Charles II returned to the throne in 1660, he reduced the garrison to its pre-war levels but repaired the fortifications in the light of the continuing Dutch threat; in 1676 the castle was equipped with 16 guns.[9]

Portland Castle continued in use through the 18th century, primarily protecting vessels against privateers, including merchant vessels carrying stone from the local Portland quarries.[12] Reports in 1702 and 1715 complained about the dilapidated condition of the fortification – the sea had washed away 112 feet of its foundations – and the number of artillery pieces was reduced to seven.[13] By 1779, the castle had a caretaker garrison of three men and eight guns, and reportedly had not been repaired in the previous 30 years.[14] During the Napoleonic Wars, the castle's guns were increased to comprise six 24-pounder, six 12-pounders and two 9-pounder guns, but the fortification remained in a poor condition overall.[14]

Following the final defeat of Napoleon, the castle was disarmed and leased to John Manning, a Portland churchman, who converted it from a fortress into a private house.[15] John's son, Charles Manning, took over the house in 1834 and continued to develop it.[16] Among the Mannings' work was the conversion of an older house alongside the main castle, which had once housed the master gunner, into a grander property, known today as the Captain's House.[17] In the late 1840s, the Portland Roads were converted into an artificial harbour through the construction of a breakwater, and new forts were built on the Verne heights and the sea front to protect it, although the structure of the old castle itself was left untouched by the growing complex of forts.[18]

Charles died in 1869 and, amid ongoing invasion fears, the War Office took over the castle again for use as accommodation for commissioned officers, including as a house for the adjutant of the Verne Citadel.[19]

20th–21st centuries

Restored 16th-century kitchen

In the early years of the 20th century, the War Office and the Office of Works held discussions on how to manage the castle. In 1908, Portland was placed onto what was known as the Schedule C list, which meant that the Army would continue to use and manage the historic property, but with input on repairs from the Office of Works.[20] With the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Portland Harbour became an important naval base and the castle was used an ordnance store.[21] The castle became a military residence again in the interwar years, and during the Second World War it was used for accommodation and offices by British and American soldiers, with part of the castle used once again for storing ordnance.[22][23] A concrete pillbox, since demolished, was constructed alongside the castle early on in the war.[24]

After the war, Portland Castle was transferred to the Ministry of Works in 1949 and opened to the public in 1955.[25] The Ministry decided to present the interior as it might have looked in the 16th century and removed most of the 19th- and 20th-century additions and changes.[25] The Captain's House and the adjacent gardens were used by the neighbouring HMS Osprey helicopter base until 1999, but with the facility's closure, this part of the fort was also opened to visitors, the house being turned into a visitor facility.[26]

Today the castle is operated by English Heritage as a tourist attraction. The main castle is protected as a Grade I listed building, and the Captain's House as a Grade II* building.[27][1]

Architecture

Plan of the castle; A – gunners' quarters; B – gun room; C – keep; D – gun platform; E – great hall; F – kitchen; G – gun platform; H – captain's house; I – courtyard

The heart of the castle is the keep, 120 feet across, comprising a central tower with two wings on either side and a gun battery to the front, together forming an unusual, fan-shaped design over-looking the sea. This is surrounded by a walled courtyard, approximately 170 feet by 90 feet, with two gun platforms on either side of the keep. The Captain's House occupies the western side of the courtyard, and the Governor's Garden lies beyond the eastern wall.

The castle is entered through an outer gateway on the southern side, surmounted by Charles II's coat of arms.

When first built, the castle would have held three tiers of artillery, two in the front battery and a third layer in the central tower.[28] The keep was originally protected by a moat, since filled in, with a drawbridge, of which only the slots now survive.[1] The castle could have been protected at short-range with hand guns, although the gunloops for these were of an antiquated design for the period, and a moated earthwork was subsequently built to the rear of the castle to provide additional protection.

The keep is two storeys high, built of ashlar Portland stone.[1] Historic England considers it to form "one of the best preserved and best known examples" of the Henrician forts.[1] In the centre of the ground floor is the octagonal great hall, now fitted with large Victorian windows, which would have originally providing living space for the garrison. Off the great hall are wings holding the gunners' quarters and the castle's kitchen, the latter equipped with a large, 16th-century fireplace.

Running around the front of the keep is the gun room. This was originally a two-storey gun battery with embrasures for five guns on the ground floor and four more above on the first floor, with the southern end of the ground floor subdivided into four barrack rooms. The ground-floor embrasures were designed with vents to allow the smoke from the guns to escape. Both the wooden roof that formed the first-floor gun platform and the internal wooden partitions have been dismantled, however, and the chamber is now open to the air. It now houses a variety of 18th and 19th century cannons.

On the first floor is the upper hall and the captain's chamber, used in the 16th century as a living and working space by the castle's commander, and converted into a dining room and a bedroom in the 19th century.[29] On the opposite side to the captain's private chamber are two other bedrooms, possibly originally for the use of the castle's lieutenant.[30]

The current Governor's Garden was created in 2002 by the horticulturist Christopher Bradley-Hole, as part of a wider programme of work across English Heritage properties.[31] The maritime-themed garden features circular designs, echoing those in the adjacent castle, and uses local Portland stone.

Outside links

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about Portland Castle)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 National Heritage List 1015326: Portland Castle
  2. Harrington 2007, p. 11; Walton 2010, p. 70
  3. Lawson 2002, pp. 19–20; Harrington 2007, p. 52
  4. Biddle et al. 2001, p. 40
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Lawson 2002, p. 22
  6. Biddle et al. 2001, pp. 35, 40
  7. Harrington 2007, p. 49; Saunders 1989, pp. 70–71
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lawson 2002, p. 19
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 Lawson 2002, p. 24
  10. Lawson 2002, pp. 19, 24; Harrington 2007, p. 49
  11. Harrington 2007, p. 50; Saunders 1989, p. 40
  12. Lawson 2002, pp. 25, 27
  13. Lawson 2002, p. 25; Saunders 1989, pp. 115–116
  14. 14.0 14.1 Lawson 2002, p. 27
  15. Lawson 2002, pp. 27–28, 30
  16. Lawson 2002, p. 28
  17. Lawson 2002, p. 4
  18. Lawson 2002, pp. 28–30
  19. Lawson 2002, p. 30; Pettifer 2002, p. 66
  20. Fry 2014, pp. 13–14
  21. Lawson 2002, p. 30
  22. Lawson 2002, pp. 30–32
  23. National Monuments Record: No. 1413734 – Portland Castle
  24. National Monuments Record: No. 1420378 – Pillbox at Portland Castle
  25. 25.0 25.1 Lawson 2002, pp. 3, 32; Chapple 2014, p. 84
  26. Lawson 2002, pp. 4, 32; http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/portland-castle/garden/
  27. Portland Castle
  28. Lawson 2002, p. 3
  29. Lawson 2002, pp. 10–11
  30. Lawson 2002, pp. 12–13
  31. Lawson 2002, pp. 16–17
  • 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 0-904220-23-0. 
  • Chapple, Nick (2014). A History of the National Collection: Volume Six, 1945–1953. London: English Heritage. 
  • Fry, Sebastion (2014). A History of the National Collection: Volume Two, 1900–1913. London: English Heritage. 
  • Hale, J. R. (1983). Renaissance War Studies. London: Hambledon Press. ISBN 0-907628-17-6. 
  • Harrington, Peter (2007). The Castles of Henry VIII. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-0380-1. 
  • King, D. J. Cathcart (1991). The Castle in England and Wales: An Interpretative History. London: Routledge Press. ISBN 978-0-415-00350-6. 
  • Lawson, Susannah (2002). Portland Castle: Dorset. London: English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-85074-725-3. 
  • Morley, B. M. (1976). Henry VIII and the Development of Coastal Defence. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 0-11-670777-1. 
  • Pettifer, Adrian (2002). English Castles: A Guide by Counties. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-782-5. 
  • Saunders, Andrew (1989). Fortress Britain: Artillery Fortifications in the British Isles and Ireland. Liphook: Beaufort. ISBN 1-85512-000-3. 
  • Symonds, Henry (1914). "Sandsfoot and Portland Castles". Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society 35: 27–40. 
  • Thompson, M. W. (1987). The Decline of the Castle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1-85422-608-8. 
  • Walton, Steven A. (2010). "State Building Through Building for the State: Foreign and Domestic Expertise in Tudor Fortification". Osiris 25 (1): 66–84. 

Further reading

  • Andrews, E. A.; Pinsent, M. L. (1981). "The Coastal Defences of Portland and Weymouth". Fort (9): 4–43. 
Henry VIII's Device Forts on the south coast

Kent: Sandown CastleDeal CastleWalmer CastleSandgate CastleSussex: Camber CastleHampshire: Southsea CastleHurst CastleCalshot CastleCowes CastleYarmouth CastleNetley CastleSt Andrew's CastleDorset: Portland CastleSandsfoot CastleCornwall: Pendennis CastleSt Mawes Castle