NHER 43625 (Monument record) - Site of World War Two air raid shelters at 6 and 9 Anson Road, Southtown

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Summary

Two probable air raid shelters dating to World War Two are visible as earthworks and structures on 1940s aerial photographs. Their small size and location within enclosed gardens suggest that they were private shelters, each intended for the use of a single family or household. One may have been an Anderson shelter, or a similar proprietary design; this has since been levelled. The other, which may have instead merely been an outbuilding, may equate to a building depicted on modern Ordnance Survey maps.

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Location

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

Map

May 2006. Norfolk NMP.
Two probable air raid shelters dating to World War Two are visible as earthworks and structures on aerial photographs (S1), at TG 5208 0693 and TG 5206 0692. They lay in the back gardens of 6 and 9 Anson Road, Southtown. This location, together with their small size, suggests that they were private shelters, intended for the use of these particular households. The shelter at Number 9 is visible as an earthwork mound with a curved shape in profile. This presumably covered a curved-profile, surface-level or semi-sunken structure, perhaps an Anderson shelter or a similar proprietary design. It is not visible on more recent aerial photographs of the area, e.g. (S2), and has presumably been levelled. The shelter at Number 6 appears to have been a more substantial structure, probably constructed at surface level, its roof covered by earth, turf or similar material. Two small structures on the roof may have provided ventilation. At the same time, the interpretation of this structure as a shelter remains uncertain: it could instead have been a more mundane outbuilding, such as a washhouse with a thatched roof. A small building is still visible at this approximate location on more recent aerial photographs of the site (S2) and is also depicted on modern Ordnance Survey maps. Whether it equates to any part of the 1940s structure is not known.
S. Tremlett (NMP), 9 May 2006.

  • <S1> Vertical Aerial Photograph: RAF. 1945. RAF 106G/UK/726 5089-90 26-AUG-1945 (NMR).
  • <S2> Vertical Aerial Photograph: Ordnance Survey. 1989. OS/89046 204-5 18-MAR-1989.

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Record last edited

Dec 8 2010 11:29AM

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