NHER 27545 (Monument record) - Sites of World War Two defences

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Summary

World War Two defences, including slit trenches and a possible light anti aircraft gun emplacement, are visible on contemporary and later aerial photographs. These defences were located on the bridge on Jellicoe Road, Great Yarmouth by August 1940.

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Location

Map sheet TG50NW
Civil Parish GREAT YARMOUTH, GREAT YARMOUTH, NORFOLK

Map

August 2005. Norfolk NMP.
World War Two defences, including slit trenches and a possible light anti aircraft gun emplacement, are visible on contemporary and later aerial photographs (S1) to (S8). These defences were located on the bridge on Jellicoe Road, Great Yarmouth at TG 5287 0986.
The eastern part of Jellicoe Road and the bridge over the railway were not marked on the 1938 edition of the 6" to the mile Ordnance Survey map (S10). It appears that the bridge was constructed at the very end of the 1930s and may not have been fully complete when World War Two broke out in September 1939. The earliest aerial photographs showing the bridge date from August and September 1940 (S1) to (S2). At that time wide earth banks were present on the north side of the two approaches to the bridge. These appear to have been deposited on top of the road surface, leaving only a single carriageway along the southern side of the two approaches and over the bridge itself. Irregular slit trenches had been cut into these earth banks on both the west and east approaches to the bridge (S1) to (S3). Slightly higher sections of earth bank were present at the western end of the western approach. It is not clear if these served any defensive function. Barbed wire was present on both sides of the eastern approach to the bridge.
By March 1944 only the western part of the slit trench on the western approach to the bridge appears to have been extant (S4). A new emplacement had been constructed close to the top of the western approach at TG 5288 0987. This appears to have been a polygonal structure, with concrete walls measuring up to 8m by 5m. A rectangular annexe, measuring 3.5m by 2m, was located at its eastern end. A possible light anti aircraft gun was visible in the centre of the emplacement in April 1944 (S5) but had been removed by July of that year (S6).
The defences on the Jellicoe Road bridge lay at the southern end of extensive areas of anti invasion defences and training areas to the north (NHER 27528, 32675). The earth bank remained on the bridge for several years after the end of the war (S7) to (S8). By April 1952 the bridge had been completed and both carriageways were in use (S9).
J. Albone (NMP), 8 August 2005

  • <S1> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1940. RAF 2A/BR190 33 18-AUG-1940 (NMR).
  • <S10> Map: Ordnance Survey. 1938. Ordnance Survey 1938 edition 6" Sheet LXVI.SE.
  • <S2> Oblique Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1940. NMR TG 5309/27 (MSO 31029 2/BR172 4640) 04-SEP-1940.
  • <S3> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1941. RAF 268F/BR172 30 10-FEB-1941 (NMR).
  • <S4> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1944. RAF HLA/694 3113-3114 26-MAR-1944 (NMR).
  • <S5> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1944. RAF HLA/698 3047 08-APR-1944 (NMR).
  • <S6> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1944. RAF 106G/LA/21 3004-3005 04-JUL-1944 (NMR).
  • <S7> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1946. RAF 106G/UK/1634 2038-2039 09-JUL-1946 (NHER TG 5210A / TG 5310A).
  • <S8> Oblique Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1948. NMR TG 5209/8 (RAF 30016 CPE/UK/2522 SFFO-0240) 23-MAR-1948.
  • <S9> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1952. RAF 540/705 5123-5124 09-APR-1952 (NMR).

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Record last edited

Dec 7 2010 12:16PM

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