Yarmouth Castle
Yarmouth Castle | |
Hampshire | |
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Yarmouth Castle | |
Type: | Device fort |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SZ354897 |
Location: | 50°42’24"N, 1°30’1"W |
Town: | Yarmouth |
History | |
Built 1547 | |
Information | |
Owned by: | English Heritage |
Website: | Yarmouth Castle |
Yarmouth Castle is an artillery fort built by King Henry VIII in 1547 to protect Yarmouth Harbour on the Isle of Wight, Hampshire from the threat of French attack.
Just under 100 feet across, the square castle was initially equipped with 15 artillery guns and a garrison of 20 men. It featured an Italianate "arrow-head" bastion on its landward side; this was very different in style from the earlier circular bastions used in the Device Forts built by Henry and was the first of its kind to be constructed in Britain.
During the 16th and 17th centuries the castle continued to be maintained and modified; the seaward half of the castle was turned into a solid gun platform and additional accommodation was built for the fort's gunners. A bulwark was built on the west side of the castle and an additional gun battery was placed on the town's quay, just to the east.
For most of the Civil War of the 1640s it was held by Parliament. Following the Restoration, it was refortified by King Charles II in the 1670s.
The fortification remained in use through the 18th and 19th centuries, albeit with a smaller garrison and fewer guns, until in 1885 these were finally withdrawn. After a short period as a coast guard signalling post, the castle was brought back into military use during the First and Second World Wars.
Today the castle is in the care of English Heritage and operated as a tourist attraction.
History
Construction
Yarmouth Castle was built as a consequence of tensions between England, France and the Holy Roman Empire in the final years of the reign of King Henry VIII. The King took a systematic approach to coastal defence which had previously been lacking. Hitherto, maritime raids on the south coast had taken place in wartime, but an actual invasion of England seemed unlikely, so coastal defences had been modest, based around simple blockhouses and towers along the Sussex coast and the West Country. However the manner of Europe was changed by the Reformation and Henry's breach with Rome:[1] France and the Empire stilled their own conflict and declared an alliance against Henry in 1538, and the Pope encouraged the two countries to attack England.[2]
In 1539, Henry ordered the construction of fortifications along the most vulnerable parts of the coast, through an instruction called a "device". The immediate threat passed, but resurfaced in 1544, with France threatening an invasion across the Channel, backed by her allies in Scotland.[3] Henry therefore issued another device in 1544 to further improve the country's defences, particularly along the south coast.[4]
Yarmouth on the Isle of Wight was a vulnerable port and a castle was built here as part of the second wave of Device Forts. The fort functioned alongside the existing defences in the Solent and protected the main crossing from the west side of the island to the mainland.[5] Yarmouth Castle was a square artillery fort built around a central courtyard with an angular, "arrow-head" bastion protecting the landward side. It was initially equipped with three cannons and culverins, and twelve smaller guns, firing from a line of embrasures along the seaward side of the castle.[6][7] It was garrisoned by a small garrison, consisting of a master gunner, a porter and 17 soldiers, commanded by a captain (of whom the first was Richard Udall).[6][8] Udall lived in the castle, but the soldiers resided in the local town.[8]
The castle was built by George Mills under the direction of Richard Worsley, the Captain of the Island, on land belonging to the Crown, possibly on the site of a church destroyed during the French invasion of the Isle of Wigh of 1543.[6][9][10] Stone was obtained from the recently dissolved Quarr Abbey nearby.[6] It was finished by 1547.
The Tudor Queens
When Queen Mary I succeeded to the throne she dismissed the island's Governor, Worsley, in favour of a Roman Catholic appointee in 1553. Richard Udall was executed in 1555 for his role in the Dudley conspiracy to overthrow the Queen.[10][11]
When the Protestant Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558, peace was made with France and military attention shifted towards the Spanish threat.[12] Elizabeth reappointed Worsley to his post and he carried out an extensive redevelopment of the castle.[10] Worsley filled in half of the castle's courtyard to produce a solid artillery platform able to hold eight heavy guns with an uninterrupted field of fire over the sea, and he probably also constructed the Master Gunner's House on the other side of the castle. Nonetheless, an inspection in 1586 showed that the fortification was in poor condition. Work costing £50 was done in 1587, including the erection of an earth bulwark alongside the castle to mount additional guns.
In 1588, the vast Spanish Armada sailed up the Channel in an attempt to invade England. After its defeat, further repairs were carried out on the castle. By 1599 the Crown was informed that the castle, which was still considered an important defence for the Solent, needed expensive repairs.[6][8]
17th century
Yarmouth Castle continued to be an important military fortification, used both as a fortress but also as a transport hub and a stores depot.[8] The repairs recommended in 1599 were carried out in the first years of the 17th century and a further £300 was invested in Yarmouth Castle and nearby Sandown Castle in 1609, including adding two angular buttresses along the walls facing the sea.[6][8][9]
A survey in 1623 by the castle's captain, John Burley, reported that the garrison comprised only four gunners and the captain, with the buildings in a "ruinous" state and the defences in need of repair; similar concerns were raised in 1625 and 1629.[6][13] Suggestions that a half-moon battery should be added to the defences were not progressed, but in 1632 the parapets were raised in height and further lodgings and a long room for stores were constructed within the castle.[9] Some of the stone used for this may have been reused from nearby Sandown, whose walls had been destroyed by the sea.
In the Civil War, Captain Barnaby Burley, a relative of John Burley, held the castle on behalf of the King with a tiny garrison.[6] However he was forced to negotiated surrender terms, including that he initially be allowed to remain in the castle with armed protection, and the castle remained in the control of Parliament for the rest of the war.[6] Early during the Interregnum it was decided to increase the size of the garrison at the castle from 30 to 70 soldiers, due to concerns about a potential Royalist attack from the island of Jersey.[6] Most of the soldiers lived outside the castle itself.[13] The annual cost of this force was around £78 and in 1655 the garrison was made smaller again to reduce costs.
At the Restoration of King Charles II in 1660, most of the existing army was demobilised and the following year the garrison at Yarmouth was given four days' notice to leave the castle.[6] The King was to send the castle's artillery to Cowes, but in 1666 the town of Yarmouth agreed to take over the financial responsibility of running the site, appointing four soldiers for a garrison, although the town did not assign an officer to command them, or apparently make any repairs to the now dilapidated castle.
The Crown took over the castle again in 1670, and Robert Holmes, the new Captain of the Isle of Wight, had some of the guns brought back from Cowes to the castle. The site was refortified and a new battery placed on the adjacent quay, but the older earthworks were demolished and the moat was filled in. Holmes built a mansion for himself alongside the castle, where on three occasions he hosted the King.[6][14]
In 1688, Charles' brother, James II, faced widespread revolt and a potential invasion of England by William of Orange and though Holmes was a supporter of King James, the local inhabitants and the garrison at Yarmouth sided with William, preventing him from openly siding with the King.
18th–21st centuries
Yarmouth Castle continued to be used, and records from 1718 and 1760 show it was equipped with eight six-pound guns and five nine-pounders along the castle and the quay platforms, respectively.[15] Throughout this period it was probably staffed by a captain and six gunners, supported by the local militia.[6][15] In the early 18th century, Holmes' mansion was rebuilt, forming its current appearance.
By the 18th century, however, Yarmouth Harbour had gradually silted up and been destroyed by industrial developments, reducing the value of the anchorage, and the design of the castle had become outdated.[16]
In 1813, during the Napoleonic Wars, work was carried out to alter the design of the parapet.[15] The Crimean War sparked a fresh invasion scare and in 1855 the south coast of Britain was refortified. Yarmouth Castle underwent considerable repairs that year; four naval guns and traversing rails were installed on the castle platform, and a regular county army unit was put in place to garrison the fort. In 1881 a proposal was put forward to modernise the entire fortification, but this was rejected and in 1885 the garrison and the guns were withdrawn.[17]
The coastguard began using the castle as a signalling station in 1898.[6][17] In 1901, the War Department passed the castle to the Commissioners of Woods and Forests and in 1912 parts of the castle were leased to the Pier Hotel, which incorporated Robert Holmes's former mansion; the Pier Hotel eventually became the George Hotel and still occupies part of the old castle moat.[6][14][17] The Office of Works took control of the castle in 1913, carrying out a programme of repairs, and it was used by the military in both the First and Second World Wars. It was finally retired from military use in the 1950s.[17]
The castle today
Today, Yarmouth Castle is in the care of English Heritage and opened as a tourist attraction. It is a Grade I listed building and as a scheduled monument.[18]
Architecture
Yarmouth Castle is a square fortification, nearly 100 feet across, with an arrow-head bastion protecting the landward side. The north and west walls face the sea, protected by angular buttresses, and a 30-foot wide moat originally protected the south and east side, although this has since been filled in.[19] The castle's 16th-century bulwark and its quay battery, which originally covered the area to the west of Pier Street and the north of Quay Street, have also been destroyed.
The walls of the castle are mainly built from ashlar stone, with some red brick used on the south side. The walls are pierced by a small number of gunloops, including in the "ears" of the bastion, which would have overlooked the moat. When first built the interior of the castle formed a sequence of buildings around a courtyard, but the southern half of the castle was filled in shortly afterwards to produce a solid gun platform able to support heavy guns. It was later raised again in the 17th century to its current height. The parapet is now covered with turf, with 19th-century rounded corners, and the platform still has the rails on which the four naval guns would have traversed, dating from 1855.[20] A small lodging room, built on the platform at the top of the stairs, has since been destroyed.[20]
The arrow-head design of the castle's bastion reflected new ideas about defensive fortifications spreading out from Italy in the 16th century.[21] Earlier Henrician castles had used the older European style of semi-circular bastions to avoid presenting any weak spots in the stonework, but an arrow-headed design enabled defenders to provide much more effective supporting fire against an attacking force.[22] Yarmouth was among the first fortifications in Europe, and the first in England, to adopt this design.
The accommodation and other facilities are on the north side of the castle. On the ground floor, the entrance to the castle leads through to a courtyard, linked to four barrel-vaulted rooms in the south-west corner, originally 17th-century lodgings for the garrison. Two of these chambers were converted for use as magazines and the fittings of one of these still remains in place. In the south-east corner is the Master Gunner's House, comprising a parlour, hall and kitchen on the ground floor, and a chamber and attic on the floors above. The parlour and hall would have originally been separated by a screen; the chamber would also have been subdivided. On the first floor is a small chamber, supported on arches above the courtyard, which was used as a lodging. On the second floor, the Long Room runs on top of the barrel-vaulted chambers, its massive, original roof still intact.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Yarmouth Castle) |
- Yarmouth Castle - English Heritage
References
- ↑ Thompson 1987, p. 111; Hale 1983, p. 63
- ↑ Morley 1976, p. 7; Hale 1983, pp. 63–64
- ↑ Hale 1983, p. 80
- ↑ Harrington 2007, pp. 29–30
- ↑ Rigold 2012, pp. 12–13
- ↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 The Borough of Yarmouth – British History Online (William Page, 1912)
- ↑ Rigold 2012, pp. 11, 13
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Rigold 2012, p. 14
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 National Heritage List 1292631: Yarmouth Castle
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Rigold 2012, p. 13
- ↑ Fritze 1982, pp. 274–275
- ↑ Biddle et al. 2001, p. 40; Pattison 2009, pp. 34–35
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Rigold 2012, p. 15
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Hopkins 2004, p. 7
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 Rigold 2012, p. 18
- ↑ Hopkins 2004, p. 3; Rigold 2012, p. 1
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 Rigold 2012, p. 19
- ↑ Yarmouth Castle, Yarmouth - British Listed Buildings
- ↑ Rigold 2012, p. 3; Hopkins 2004, p. 7
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Rigold 2012, p. 11
- ↑ Saunders 1989, p. 55
- ↑ Saunders 1989, pp. 50–55
Books
- 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.
- Fritze, Ronald H. (1982). "The Role of Family and Religion in the Local Politics of Early Elizabethan England: The Case of Hampshire in the 1560s". The Historical Journal 25 (2): 267–287.
- Hale, J. 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.
- Hopkins, Dave (2004). Extensive Urban Survey – Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. London, UK: English Heritage. doi:10.5284/1000227.
- 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.
- Pattison, Paul (2009). Pendennis Castle and St Mawes Castle. London, UK: English Heritage. ISBN 9781850747239.
- Rigold, S. E. (1958). Yarmouth Castle, Isle of Wight. London, UK: HMSO. OCLC 810988359.
- Rigold, S. E. (2012). Yarmouth Castle, Isle of Wight (revised ed.). London, UK: English Heritage. ISBN 9781850740490.
- Saunders, Andrew (1989). Fortress Britain: Artillery Fortifications in the British Isles and Ireland. Liphook, UK: Beaufort. ISBN 1855120003.
- Thompson, M. W. (1987). The Decline of the Castle. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1854226088.
Henry VIII's Device Forts on the south coast |
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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 |