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Monument details

HER Number:TQ 77 SE 1330
Type of record:Monument
Name:Earth banking adjacent to the Second World War Stop Line on the Hoo Peninsula, between Lodge Hill and Wybornes Wood.

Summary

This feature is noted in the English Heritage report on the Second World War Stop Line in the Hoo Peninsula. The feature comprises earth banking adjacent to the Second World War Stop Line on the Hoo Peninsula, between Lodge Hill and Wybornes Wood, part of the Stop Line defences.


Grid Reference:TQ 7728 7419
Map Sheet:TQ77SE
Parish:HIGH HALSTOW, MEDWAY, KENT
HOO ST WERBURGH, MEDWAY, KENT

Monument Types

  • DEFENCE WORK (Modern - 1940 AD to 2050 AD)

Full description

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Earth banking adjacent to the Second World War Stop Line on the Hoo Peninsula, between Lodge Hill and Wybornes Wood, part of the Stop Line defences; from the English Heritage report on the Second World War Stop Line from Hoo St Werburgh to Higham Marshes. The Stop Line was an integrated series of anti-invasion defence works including manmade and natural defences, including earth defences, anti-tank ditches, pillboxes and anti-tank gun emplacements. Each of the types of features are recorded separately on the monuments record.

The report states: "This section skirted the east side of Lodge Hill Ordnance Depot (NRHE 1077634) from the east gate of the depot at TQ 7739 7382 to the northeastern corner of Wybornes Wood at TQ 7715 7459 for a distance of 715m. Aerial photographs of 1944 show Wybornes Wood was used as part of the defensive line. There is no evidence of significant tree felling or re-growth before 1944 suggesting there was no anti-tank ditch through Wybornes Wood. Pillboxes were placed along the northern edge of the wood, overlooking the marshes. Several small gun emplacements and weapons pits were located at the edge of the cleared strip around the anti-tank ditch.
Condition: The earliest aerial photographs taken in 1944 show this section of anti-tank ditch was already out of use and being backfilled with mounds of earth visible alongside the former ditch. Sub-surface remains of sections of the ditch were indicated by cropmarks in pasture on aerial photographs of 2003 to the south of Wybornes Wood. There is intermittent evidence of a spread ditch in the area between the south east corner of Wybornes Wood and the First World War redoubt and pillbox to the south (observation from field visit in May 2015). (1)


<1> historic england, 2014, Hoo Peninsula Landscape Project: Second World War Stop Line: Hoo St Werburgh to Higham Marshes. Research Report 9-2014. (Bibliographic reference). SKE31599.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
<1>Bibliographic reference: historic england. 2014. Hoo Peninsula Landscape Project: Second World War Stop Line: Hoo St Werburgh to Higham Marshes. Research Report 9-2014..

Related records

TQ 77 SE 1322Part of: Second World War Stop Line: Hoo St Werburgh to Higham Marshes, Hoo Peninsula, Kent (Monument)