Elvis killer
Active member
I thought I'd share my pics of my favorite explore to date. This info was found on the Keys to the past website.
Robert's Battery at Hartley was built in response to the threat of a bombardment of Tyneside in World War I (1914-1918). At first Tyneside was protected by an old battleship permanently based on the river as a guardship but, in 1916 the ship was needed elsewhere. As an alternative the Army was offered two redundant gun turrets, from the 1898 HMS Illustrious, for emplacement on land and two identical batteries were constructed at Marsden, near Sunderland (Kitchener Battery) and at Hartley (Robert's Battery). Work began in 1917 but was unfinished at the end of the war; it was eventually finished in September 1921 at a cost of about £64,000. Unfortunately, a few years later in 1924 the Committee of Imperial Defence recommended removal of the turrets, probably because the guns were obsolete, and work was underway in April 1926.
The battery had two transmitting cells and two receiving cells, one each to the north and south of the battery, and a Barr and Stroud split image range finder in a rangefinding post. Extensive underground works were constructed including shell and cartridge stores, engine room, etc. and these were still visible in the early 1960s. On the surface of these works were 12 inch guns and a blockhouse. The concrete plinths for these guns and the blockhouse were also still visible in the early 1960s. Sadly these features are no longer visible. A 30ft Barr and Stroud post was the Battery Command post and had officers' accommodation attached and now survives as a private house (Fort House). The post was surrounded by a defensible wall, which still survives, pierced by rifle loopholes and including at one corner a defensible latrine. Inside the walled area were domestic buildings e.g., wooden huts, water tower, etc. A Chain Home Low radar station was established on the site of Hartley Battery in World War II (1939-1945) and the buildings still survive. The underground works represent one of the largest military engineering projects of their day. Fort House, the boundary wall and outbuildings are Grade II* Listed Buildings protected by law.
Getting into the main underground system involved dropping down a 10 metre air shaft, none of us had any SRT skills but what we did have was some engineering knowledge. A supporting bracket was fabricated and a "rope ladder" was made from threaded bar, washers, nuts and nylon strapping, the bracket and ladder were hilti bolted to the floor and we decended into the complex.
In the main room
Thats a torch in the distance, trying to gauge the size of the passage.
1970's graffiti
Some artifacts
Escape tunnel
The way out
The entrnace has now been sealed up due to the fact that horses are now in the field that the battery was placed. As far as I know only one other explorer has been here,he left this behind with his phone number on it.
Link to his explore is here
http://www.28dayslater.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=8424&highlight=huge+bunker+complex
Thanks for looking and sorry for the amount of pics
Robert's Battery at Hartley was built in response to the threat of a bombardment of Tyneside in World War I (1914-1918). At first Tyneside was protected by an old battleship permanently based on the river as a guardship but, in 1916 the ship was needed elsewhere. As an alternative the Army was offered two redundant gun turrets, from the 1898 HMS Illustrious, for emplacement on land and two identical batteries were constructed at Marsden, near Sunderland (Kitchener Battery) and at Hartley (Robert's Battery). Work began in 1917 but was unfinished at the end of the war; it was eventually finished in September 1921 at a cost of about £64,000. Unfortunately, a few years later in 1924 the Committee of Imperial Defence recommended removal of the turrets, probably because the guns were obsolete, and work was underway in April 1926.
The battery had two transmitting cells and two receiving cells, one each to the north and south of the battery, and a Barr and Stroud split image range finder in a rangefinding post. Extensive underground works were constructed including shell and cartridge stores, engine room, etc. and these were still visible in the early 1960s. On the surface of these works were 12 inch guns and a blockhouse. The concrete plinths for these guns and the blockhouse were also still visible in the early 1960s. Sadly these features are no longer visible. A 30ft Barr and Stroud post was the Battery Command post and had officers' accommodation attached and now survives as a private house (Fort House). The post was surrounded by a defensible wall, which still survives, pierced by rifle loopholes and including at one corner a defensible latrine. Inside the walled area were domestic buildings e.g., wooden huts, water tower, etc. A Chain Home Low radar station was established on the site of Hartley Battery in World War II (1939-1945) and the buildings still survive. The underground works represent one of the largest military engineering projects of their day. Fort House, the boundary wall and outbuildings are Grade II* Listed Buildings protected by law.
Getting into the main underground system involved dropping down a 10 metre air shaft, none of us had any SRT skills but what we did have was some engineering knowledge. A supporting bracket was fabricated and a "rope ladder" was made from threaded bar, washers, nuts and nylon strapping, the bracket and ladder were hilti bolted to the floor and we decended into the complex.
In the main room
Thats a torch in the distance, trying to gauge the size of the passage.
1970's graffiti
Some artifacts
Escape tunnel
The way out
The entrnace has now been sealed up due to the fact that horses are now in the field that the battery was placed. As far as I know only one other explorer has been here,he left this behind with his phone number on it.
Link to his explore is here
http://www.28dayslater.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=8424&highlight=huge+bunker+complex
Thanks for looking and sorry for the amount of pics