Portsmouth News

Detailed new book examines the defences of Portsea Island

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If there is one book you will want about the history of Portsmouth then Barracks, Forts and Ramparts is all you will need. This 450-page A4 book has everything about the history of our great town and then city.

Although it costs a hefty

£40 then consider this; my books of 80 pages comprising then and now photograph­s cost £10 which puts this 450-page book in perspectiv­e. It is the work of Celia Clark and Martin Marks.

Everything about Portsmouth’s past is included, from the Old Portsmouth and Gosport fortificat­ions, the forts at Spithead, the forts along the Gosport peninsula and those on top of Portsdown Hill.

Back down at sea level and Fort Cumberland along with Fraser Battery gunnery range at Eastney are all well researched.

Gunwharf Quays, the reason for it being there, its becoming HMS Vernon and its loss, demolition and rebuilding as a shopping centre is well documented. The Portsmouth Royal Dockyard, as it once was, has much for historians to digest.

The preserved boats of the Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust are all mentioned as is Foudroyant/HMS Trincomale­e.

Both Haslar Royal Naval Hospital at Gosport and the QA at Cosham have also been researched with many maps and photograph­s illustrati­ng their history .

Stokes Bay Lines and Batteries along with Fort Monckton are also well documented.

St Andrew’s Church, Eastney, the Royal Clarence Victuallin­g Yard and Southwick Park, the former home of HMS Dryad, are just a few more of the subjects covered in the

The cover of Barracks, Forts and Ramparts. book.

As I said, you need never purchase another book on the defence of Portsea Island as everything here is so well researched and documented and well worth the expense.

The book, at the time of writing, cannot be bought in book shops so you will have to contact one of the authors, Celia Clark at 8, Florence

Road, Southsea PO5 2NE. Email celiadeane.clark@btopenworl­d.com.

Nelson and his fleet destroyed the Franco/Spanish opposition at the Battle of Trafalgar, but what happened to all their ships afterwards?

Most would have been captured and the ships’ crews awarded sums of money. But it was not to be. Admiral James includes in The Durable Monument – Admiral Nelson ( 1948) what a young sailor wrote home to his father: ‘We have taken a rare parcel of ships but the wind is so rough we cannot bring them home, else I should roll in money so we are busy smashing ‘em and blowing ‘em up wholesale. Our dear Admiral Nelson was killed! so we have paid pretty sharply for licking ‘em.’

 ??  ?? Defensive positions surroundin­g Portsea island in the Victorian period.
Defensive positions surroundin­g Portsea island in the Victorian period.
 ??  ?? Gunwharf Quays under constructi­on on the former HMS Vernon site.
Gunwharf Quays under constructi­on on the former HMS Vernon site.

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