Exploring out to sea, sort of, a first for myself and with only a weeks planning the best tide times to head out to Grain Tower Battery myself and CapturePhotography found ourselfs at the battery.
Despite the excitement, my hatred for ladders still appears to be a thing, quoting Jeremy Clarkson’s “many poos have come out” while climbing the sketchy ladder.
The explore itself was great, and in some cases quite unusual with the mount of general public also walking out to the battery and even climbing onto it themselves.
There’s not much left inside, other than litter and discarded bbqs from previous visitors but still creates an amazing and unique explore. With the Maunsell Sea Forts visible in the distance, the obvious question remains… when will they be our next target?
Brief history below, pinched from Wikipedia as always followed by the all important photos.
Shot of the Maunsell Forts off in the distance with a terrible 70mm zoom
Despite the excitement, my hatred for ladders still appears to be a thing, quoting Jeremy Clarkson’s “many poos have come out” while climbing the sketchy ladder.
The explore itself was great, and in some cases quite unusual with the mount of general public also walking out to the battery and even climbing onto it themselves.
There’s not much left inside, other than litter and discarded bbqs from previous visitors but still creates an amazing and unique explore. With the Maunsell Sea Forts visible in the distance, the obvious question remains… when will they be our next target?
Brief history below, pinched from Wikipedia as always followed by the all important photos.
Grain Tower is a mid-19th-century gun tower situated offshore just east of Grain, Kent, standing in the mouth of the River Medway. It was built along the same lines as the Martello towers that were constructed along the British and Irish coastlines in the early 19th century and is the last-built example of a gun tower of this type. It owed its existence to the need to protect the important dockyards at Sheerness and Chatham from a perceived French naval threat during a period of tension in the 1850s.
Rapid improvements to artillery technology in the mid-19th century meant that the tower was effectively obsolete as soon as it had been completed. A proposal to turn it into a casemated fort was dropped for being too expensive. By the end of the 19th century the tower had gained a new significance as a defence against raids by fast torpedo boats. It was used in both the First and Second World Wars, when its fabric was substantially altered to support new quick-firing guns. It was decommissioned in 1956 and remains derelict today. The tower has been privately owned since 2005 and was reportedly sold to a new owner in 2014 for £400,000.
Shot of the Maunsell Forts off in the distance with a terrible 70mm zoom