Yorkshire Post

Road closures to be extended for works

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THE FIGHTING strength of a buried fortress of Henry VIII’s fortress is being revealed by archaeolog­ists in Hull.

The Tudor monarch ordered the building of new defences to guard the mouth of the river Hull, after the uprisings in the North and against the threat of French invasion.

Archaeolog­ists hope the remains of the South Blockhouse – next to the Deep aquarium – which was built between 1541 and 1543, will eventually be a visitor attraction, telling the story of the city’s sometime turbulent past.

So far the dig, in the coach park next to the aquarium, has revealed part of the thick curving wall from 1541 and two of the gun ports, one facing west over the River Hull, once the city’s docks, the other east.

The one facing west has a later brick floor where the cannon would have sat. Next to it is an L-shaped chamber, which could have been where gunpowder was stored or the men sheltered when the gun was fired.

There are also remains of cisterns for storing water, which were added later, and could have come from a still, which is on plans of 1715, which condensed brackish water for drinking.

When the site was last dug 20 years ago, a breech-loading cannon identical to those recovered from Henry VIII’s sunken flagship the Mary Rose, was found.

Nothing as headline-grabbing has been found this time, but archaeolog­ists say they are pleased with the fortress’s state of preservati­on and the amount of interest it has generated.

Next Tuesday will be the last time the site will be open to the public before it is reburied. Project manager Ken Steedman said archaeolog­ists had had a couple of hundred visitors to the site.

He added: “It has been very satisfying and has given us a good insight into the survival of the building. We clearly have elements of the mid 16th century South Blockhouse surviving intact. They have been incorporat­ed into later modificati­ons but there are details of the gun ports. We know there were about four of the type of gun we found back in 1997 when it was finally decommissi­oned.”

The fortress was later a prison housing Catholic dissenters, some of whom were cruelly imprisoned for years in rooms which overflowed on a high tide. and finally demolished in the 1860s. The site is perfectly placed to catch visitors going to the Deep, and also from cruise ships, if proposals for a £50m terminal go ahead.

Overnight road closures on two main routes in a town are to be extended to allow for the completion of road improvemen­ts.

Bad weather last week has meant resurfacin­g work on the A619 Chatsworth Road and the A619 Markham Road in Chesterfie­ld was delayed. Both roads are now expected to remain closed overnight until next Friday, so resurfacin­g can be completed and line markings reinstated. The closures will be lifted this weekend.

 ??  ?? Archaeoogi­sts working on the remains of the South Blockhouse of the 16th century fortress, next to the Deep aquarium.
Archaeoogi­sts working on the remains of the South Blockhouse of the 16th century fortress, next to the Deep aquarium.
 ??  ?? A drawing of the 16th century fortress next to the city.
A drawing of the 16th century fortress next to the city.

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