The Grand Shaft Triple Staircase, Western Heights, Dover, Kent, UK (4)
Selected for Google Earth [?] - ID: 1427675
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- Uploaded on March 21, 2007
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All Rights Reserved
by John Latter -
Extra information
- Camera: PENTAX Corporation PENTAX Optio 33LF
- Taken on 2005/06/05 10:38:01
- Exposure: 0.017s (1/60)
- Focal Length: 5.80mm
- F/Stop: f/2.600
- ISO Speed: ISO200
- Exposure Bias: 0.00 EV
- Flash fired

Comments (3)
John Latter, on March 21, 2007, said:
A view from one of the triple staircases looking into the Grand Shaft.
For more images and info (including free admission open days) see:
Grand Shaft Images
and
Grand Shaft Info
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John Latter, on May 10, 2007, said:
Standard Info:
Legend has it that one staircase was labelled "Officers and their Ladies", the second, "Senior NCO's and their Wives", and the third, "Other Ranks and their Women".
From a military point of view, however, it would make sense - particularly during an 'emergency' - to introduce a dynamically allocated 'one-way' system.
If troops needed to be quickly dispatched to the port area below, for example, then designating, say, two of the staircases to be 'down only' would result in an unimpeded descent.
Image/photo taken on 5th June, 2005.
Click for information on open days.
The Grand Shaft, built between 1806-1809, is only part of Dover's extensive Napoleonic defenses - click on Western Heights and then check the tag list for all the locations covered (eg Drop Redoubt, North Centre Bastion, North Entrance - more will be added as time goes on).
Also see St Martin's Battery
Work began on Dover's Western Heights fortifications in the 1770s and was intensified, first in the early 1800s because of Napoleon I (Napoleon Bonaparte), and again in the mid-Nineteenth Century because of Napoleon III (originally known as Charles Louis Napoleon Bonaparte).
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John Latter, on June 15, 2011, said:
Also see:
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any red or blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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