English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Sunderland
Easting
440600
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
560600
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Seaburn
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Seaburn, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1857
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1857 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Sunderland
Easting
440500
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
560300
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Seaburn
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Seaburn, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1856
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1856 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Sunderland
Easting
440800
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ45NW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
558900
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Roker
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Roker, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1855
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1855 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Sunderland
Easting
440280
Grid ref figure
8
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ46SW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
NMRNUMBER
NZ 46 SW 109
Northing
560200
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Seaburn
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox. Visible as Second World War structures and earthworks on air photographs are a military camp, military buildings, pillboxes, an ordnance store, air raid shelters, an Anderson shelter, trenches and barbed wire obstructions. They are centred at NZ 4039 6043. At NZ 4028 6020 there is a pillbox surrounded by a barbed wire obstruction. Further lengths of barbed wire obstruction are visible in this vicinity.
Site Name
Seaburn, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1854
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1854 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed; NMR monument number 1454847; Vertical aerial photograph reference number RAF 106G/UK/1585 5100 20-JUN-1946; Vertical aerial photograph reference number RAF S629 0083 22-OCT-1941
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Sunderland
Easting
440900
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ45NW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
558900
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Roker
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Roker, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1853
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1853 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
422800
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ26NW
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565200
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Newcastle
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Nuns Moor, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1852
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1852 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
416500
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ16NE
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565300
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Newburn
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Newburn, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1851
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1851 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
416400
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ16NE
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
565200
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Newburn
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Newburn, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1850
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1850 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
419900
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ16SE
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563900
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Scotswood
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Scotswood, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1849
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1849 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001
English, British
Class
Defence
COMP1
Jennifer Morrison
DAY1
20
District
Newcastle
Easting
419900
Grid ref figure
6
HISTORY_TOPIC
World Wars
Map Sheet
NZ16SE
MONTH1
9
Grid Reference
NZ
Northing
563700
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Place
Scotswood
Description
Historic Ordnance Survey Map evidence shows a pillbox of Second World War origin at this location.
SITEASS
The pillbox is the most familiar type of C20 defensive building. Sometimes referred to as defence posts, blockhouses or police posts. Concrete pillboxes were first used by the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War. The concept was copied by the Germans in WW1 and later by the British. The majority of WW2 pillboxes were associated with beach defences, stop-lines and nodal points. Some were sited to defend coastal batteries, airfields, radar stations and factories. More than 18,000 were built during 1940. In June 1940 branch FW3 of the War Office Directorate of Fortifications and Works issued designs for about a dozen standard pillboxes. In practice a multiplicity of designs arose. However most pillboxes consist of a basic squat, heavily constructed building, usually flat-roofed, no more than 1.98m high and quadrilateral, polygonal or circular in plan. There were one or two entrances, sometimes protected by a porch or wall. They all have a series of horizontal slits (firing loops, loopholes or embrasures) to provide interlocking fields of fire over the anticipated direction of attack. Most pillboxes were designed for rifles or light machine guns. More heavily armed examples had Vickers machine guns, anti-tank guns or Hotchkiss guns. Pillbox walls are almost invariably of concrete, sometimes with brick shuttering or stone facing {Defence of Britain Handbook, 1995, pp 79-82}.
Site Type: Broad
Fortification
SITEDESC
Pillbox
Site Name
Scotswood, Pillbox
Site Type: Specific
Pillbox
HER Number
1848
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Sources
<< HER 1848 >> A. Rudd, Alan Rudd's list of wartime defences which once existed...
YEAR1
2001