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Monument details

HER Number:TR 34 SW 634
Type of record:Monument
Name:Site of Possible Medieval Watchtower, Dover

Summary

The site of Archcliffe Fort is thought to have originated as a late 14th century watchtower surrounded by a bank and ditch, later replaced by an artillery bulwark during the reign of Henry VIII. This in turn was replaced by the present fort in the mid 17th century. No evidence for the watchtower or the bulwark has been found so far.


Grid Reference:TR 315 402
Map Sheet:TR34SW
Parish:DOVER, DOVER, KENT

Monument Types

  • BANK (EARTHWORK) (Medieval to Post Medieval - 1375 AD? to 1547 AD?)
  • DITCH (Medieval to Post Medieval - 1375 AD? to 1547 AD?)
  • WATCH TOWER (Medieval to Post Medieval - 1375 AD? to 1547 AD?)
Protected Status:Scheduled Monument 1016420: ARCHCLIFFE FORT

Full description

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The site of Archcliffe Fort is thought to have originated as a late 14th century watchtower surrounded by a bank and ditch, later replaced by an artillery bulwark during the reign of Henry VIII (TR 34 SW 635). This in turn was replaced by the present fort in the mid 17th century (TR 34 SW 84). No evidence for the watchtower or the bulwark has been found so far.(1)

From the National Heritage List for England:

Details
The monument includes the surviving features of Archcliffe Fort, lying at the foot of Dover's Western Heights and forming part of the coastal defences of the town from at least the 16th century onwards.

The first fort, or bulwark, was constructed under Henry VIII in 1539 and 1540, although the initial fortification of the site may date back to the late 14th century. No trace of remains of these periods can be identified, although the evidence of early plans suggests that the Henrician defences included a pentagonal structure in the approximate position of the present western bastion. This was linked by a ditch to a gatehouse close to the site of the present eastern bastion. There were also buildings within the ditched enclosure.

The remains which survive today represent a substantial part of a bastioned trace fortification, dating from the early 17th century, of which the seaward face, entrance and bastions were modified in the 19th century. The seaward defences, subsequently removed by the construction of the railway in 1928, were modified during 1872 to include positions for five ten inch rifle muzzle loading guns. The landward side of the fort remains intact and largely unaltered. The landward curtain, over 150m in length, includes a ditch and stone-faced earth ramparts on which a new parapet was raised in 1755, and which still show evidence of firing steps. The curtain terminates in two bastions and in its centre is the entrance to the fort, remodelled in 1807-9 and again in 1814-15 when a brick barbican, now largely destroyed by the construction of the A20, was added to its front. During World War II a second vehicle access was cut through the rampart, immediately east of the gatehouse.

The free-standing buildings within the interior of the fort and all modern security fences and fittings are excluded from the scheduling although the ground beneath all these features is included. The monument is in the care of the Secretary of State.

Reasons for Designation
The strategic position of Dover at the closest point of the English coast to that of France, has led, from the Roman period onwards, to the development of extensive and complex systems of fortification. Many owed their design and construction to periods of political unrest within Europe, or to specific threats of invasion, both real and imagined. Some were obsolete by the time that they were completed. Their development may also be seen as a response to the changing nature of warfare, with the introduction of guns providing the stimulus for the most radical change.

The defences of Dover fall into two distinct groups: those commanding the heights; and those, such as Archcliffe Fort, in low-lying positions for the immediate defence of town and harbour.

Despite the loss of its seaward defences and the outermost elements of those on the landward side, Archcliffe Fort remains an important element in the story of Dover's fortification. Incorporating the remains of the fort constructed in 1539-40 as part of Henry VIII's maritime defence programme, itself considered to be of national importance, the surviving 17th century defences are of considerable rarity. In addition, the fort will contain buried archaeological deposits providing information about its structure and use.


<1> Victor Smith and Andrew Saunders, 2001, Kent's Defence Heritage (Unpublished document). SKE6956.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
<1>Unpublished document: Victor Smith and Andrew Saunders. 2001. Kent's Defence Heritage.