Photos by John Latter : on the map, in Google Earth (KML)
Dover Grammar School for Boys (UK)
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Statue of Charles Stewart Rolls Dover UK
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Dover Castle from Dover Beach, Kent, UK
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The Grand Shaft, Western Heights, Dover UK (1)
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John Latter's conversations
Dead Man's Island, more properly known as the Detached Bastion, is seperated from the North Centre Bastion (where the photo was taken from) by a hanging moat, or cross-ditch.
This moat, whose walls are largely covered in ivy, begins halfway down the left-hand side of the photo and then runs across to the bottom right-hand corner.
The two bastions (connected by the South Caponier) are only part of an extensive Napoleonic and Victorian defence system embedded into the Western Heights above the town of Dover, England..
The central mound on Dead Man's Island was originally a bombproof shelter (see notes below) and then the southern end, whose entrance is visible above, was converted into a shell store and RA store. The mound is divided by an archway.
Above the left-hand slope of the mound, and beneath the dark-green foliage, is an opening to a set of steps leading down to the first drawbridge of the western tunnel (gallery).
Half-way down the right-hand side of the photo the entrance to another set of steps, also hidden under dark-green foliage, which lead to the eastern tunnel.
Out of sight on the other side of the ridge above the mound is the attached North-West Caponier; beyond the caponier and northern side of Dead Man's Island is the glacis.
Dead Man's Island and the North Centre Bastion are an English Heritage site: click on the North Centre Bastion tag to see all internal and external photos of this location.
Extracts from an English Heritage "Archaeological Investigation" (Report No. 7 - North Centre and Detached Bastions):
North Centre and Detached Bastions
The Bombproof Shelter (later Shell Store and RA Store)
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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A view of Dover's 12th Century Norman Castle taken from below the eastern end of the pre-Napoleonic earthwork which lies on the northern slopes of the Western Heights.
From "back to front":
1) The 12th Century Norman Keep, or Great Tower, of Dover Castle are surrounded by the massive walls of the Inner Bailey.
Below the Inner Bailey are the Western Battlements, or Western Curtain Wall; Peverell`s Gate is clearly visible.
To the right of the Keep and Inner Bailey, but hidden behind the main trunk of the leafless tree left of centre, are the Roman Pharos and Saxon church of St Mary-in-Castro.
2) The sun-lit ridge running down from the right-hand side of the photo contains the 'lumps and bumps' of the Detached Bastion which is connected to the North Centre Bastion by the South Caponier. This complex is are part of an extensive Napoleonic and Victorian defense system embedded into the Western Heights.
Dover Castle and many locations on the Western Heights are English Heritage sites.
3) The grass bank in shadow on the bottom right-hand side of the picture is the eastern end of the pre-Napoleonic earthwork which lies between the North Centre Bastion complex and the Outer Bastion.
Standard information for the Pre-Napoleonic Earthworks:
Click on the Earthworks tag to see all photos of this location.
The apparent length of this east-west pre-Napoleonic mound and flanking ditches is about 275 hundred yards. It runs parallel to, and some 50 yards downhill from, the North Lines (or Moats) that connect the North Centre Bastion* (behind the viewer) to the mysterious Outer Bastion (in front).
On Google Earth (and on location) the earthwork can be seen to have been truncated to the west by the later construction of the Outer Bastion; the ground drops away on the other side of the Outer Bastion so the earthwork almost certainly once terminated within it confines.
Today's North Centre Bastion and Detached Bastion are a 'second edition' (built 1858 - 1867) with the earthwork now stopping well short of the Detached Bastion's west flanking moat. Before this mid-Victorian alteration, however, the earthwork extended much further to the east.
The original North Centre Bastion (built 1804 - 1815), for example, was constructed around the earthwork which created a dog-leg in the moat (or cross ditch) that seperated the Detached Bastion (as it was then) from the North Centre Bastion proper.
An 1859 map indicates the eastern end of the earthwork terminated near the Outer Bridge of the North Entrance, and that today's moat from the east side of the North Centre Bastion to the Outer Bridge may have replaced it.
As far as I am aware, this is the only pre-Napoleonic earthwork still identifiable as such on the Western Heights of Dover, Kent, UK.
I grew up in Westbury Road and Clarendon Place which lie below this part of the Western Heights and since childhood had vaguely assumed the earthwork was a First World War or Second World War construction.
The ditch above the mound is shallow ("Man-sized") while that below it is much deeper ("No Men here, thank you."). In other words, I thought it was a simple trench built to fill the gap between the North Centre Bastion and the Outer Bastion - it never occured to me that the construction dates might be the other way around!
The Wikipedia entry for the Western Heights states they were "First given earthworks in 1779" without giving any of their locations.
An English Heritage "Archaeological Investigation" (Report No. 7 - North Centre and Detached Bastions), on the other hand, specifically refers to the earthwork in the above photo, states how it existed before the first North Centre Bastion and was subsequently incorporated into it, etc., but also says it is only probable that it dates from the 1770s and 1780s.
Click to see my super-duper video of the North Centre Bastion.
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
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The Sergeant Major's house, just south of Peverell`s Gate on the western Outer Curtain Wall, was once the home of the Battery Sergeant Majors who were garrisoned at Dover Castle. It is now an English Heritage "Holiday Cottage":
I would love to stay in the Sergeant Major's House, not least because of having the Castle grounds all to myself first thing in the morning and last thing at night - taking photographs at those times would be brilliant :)
Unfortunately, I'll have to win the Lottery first: the price for 7 nights between the 16th of July and the 2nd of September in 2010 (the most expensive period) is currently scheduled to be GBP1486! (click to see the full price list).
Peverell's Gate (or Peverell's Tower) is on the left-hand side of the photo; the Keep, or Great Tower, is above and behind the Sergeant Major's House; the west flanking tower of Palace Gate on the Inner Bailey walls is at top right.
This view was taken from Gatton's Tower.
Extract from "The History of the Town and Port of Dover and of Dover Castle (With a Short Account of the Cinque Ports)", Volume 2. Dedicated by the Reverend John Lyon, Minister of "Saint Mary`s", on April 21st, 1814, and published the same year:
Gatton Tower
Dover Castle is an English Heritage site.
Abridged from The English Heritage Trail:
Dover Castle
Dover Castle appears in "Dover in World War Two: 1942", a ten minute British Ministry of Information film, released by the US Office of War Information, and narrated by the American journalist, Edward R. Murrow.
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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Peverell's Gate (alt. Peverell's Tower) is on Dover Castle's Western Outer Curtain Wall with Gatton Tower (to the south) behind the viewer and the out-of-view Queen Mary Tower in front; the inside of Constable`s Gate is visible through the arch beyond the drawbridge.
The privet fence on the right marks the garden boundary of the Georgian, "Sergeant Major`s House"; from the 17th of July to the 3rd of September, 2009, it cost GBP1351 to stay there for 7 nights (see "prices" on this English Heritage webpage).
Click to see all photos of Dover Castle, an English Heritage site.
Standard Info for Peverell's Gate (Updated 2009)
Extracts from "The History of the Town and Port of Dover and of Dover Castle (With a Short Account of the Cinque Ports)", Volume 2. Dedicated by the Reverend John Lyon, Minister of "Saint Mary`s", on April 21st, 1814, and published the same year:
Extract from "Dover Castle" by R. Allen Brown (Her Majesty's Stationery Office, HMSO 1974) (Abridged):
Extract from "The History of the Castle, Town and Port of Dover" by Reverend S. P. H. Statham, Rector of St Mary-in-the-Castle (ie St Mary-in-Castro) (Longmans, Green, and Co., 1899):
Abridged from The English Heritage Trail:
Dover Castle
Dover Castle appears in "Dover in World War Two: 1942", a ten minute British Ministry of Information film, released by the US Office of War Information, and narrated by the American journalist, Edward R. Murrow.
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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A December 2009 view of the old bridge entrance to the Drop Redoubt, part of an extensive Napoleonic and Victorian defence system embedded into the Western Heights above the town of Dover, England.
What I particularly like about this photo is how the sunlight is reflected off of the Saxon church of St Mary-in-Castro and the adjacent Pharos on the horizon (both are located in the grounds of Dover Castle).
The church and lighthouse can be 'blown-up' quite well, but this is definitely an occasion where I wish my camera had more than 6 megapixels!
The Roman Pharos is one of a pair, the remains of the other, known as the Bredenstone) are in the Drop Redoubt itself.
Click to see all photos of the Drop Redoubt.
This is an English Heritage site. Abridged extracts from English Heritage's Pastscape entry for the Bredenstone and Drop Redoubt are as follows:
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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The ivy-covered wall on the left-hand side of the photo is the north wall of Dead Man's Island, more properly known as the Detached Bastion and part of the North Centre Bastion complex on the Western Heights of Dover, England.
These two Bastions (connected by the South Caponier) are but two components of an extensive Napoleonic and Victorian defence system embedded into the Western Heights.
On the moat floor is a well-defined path which provides easy access all the way around the moats from the North Entrance up to the beginning of the connecting moat leading from the North Centre Bastion to the Outer Bastion.
The outer wall of the North-West Caponier is behind the trees along the top right-hand edge of the photo (which was taken from above the outer moat wall, a few feet away from the top of the Detached Bastion Glacis).
This is an English Heritage site
There's now a three-part video of the North Centre Bastion available on YouTube:
Part 1: Dead Man`s Island, North Centre Bastion, Western Heights, Dover UK
Part 2: Dead Man`s Island, North Centre Bastion, Western Heights, Dover UK
Part 3: Dead Man`s Island, North Centre Bastion, Western Heights, Dover UK
The English Heritage Pastscape entry for the North Centre Bastion states:
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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The northern end of Dover Castle's western outer curtain wall showing (from left to right) Crevecoeur's Tower, Godsfoe's Tower, a Second World War gun position (the rectangular opening above the buttress), and Treasurer's Tower.
The photo was taken from Constable's Road which leads to Constable`s Gate, the pedestrian entrance to the grounds of Dover Castle.
Extracts from "The History of the Town and Port of Dover and of Dover Castle (With a Short Account of the Cinque Ports)", Volume 2. Dedicated by the Reverend John Lyon, Minister of "Saint Mary`s", on April 21st, 1814, and published the same year:
Clopton Tower, now Treasurer's Tower
Godsfoe Tower
Crevequer's Tower, now Crevecoeur's Tower
Extract from An Archaeological Desk-Based,Assessment of Connaught Barracks, Page 32:
Dover Castle is an English Heritage site.
Abridged from The English Heritage Trail:
Dover Castle
Dover Castle appears in "Dover in World War Two: 1942", a ten minute British Ministry of Information film, released by the US Office of War Information, and narrated by the American journalist, Edward R. Murrow.
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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A late autumn view of the trees above Queen Elizabeth Road in the grounds of Dover's 12th Century Norman Castle in the county of Kent, England.
This location is quite close to the Canons Gate entrance (indeed, the photo was taken from just in front of Rokesley Tower).
The terrace which begins just above the bottom left-hand corner of the photo, and then gently slopes upwards until it reaches the right-hand edge, is where Queen Elizabeth`s Pocket Pistol used to be located when I was a kid (pointing right, in the direction of the English Channel).
Queen Elizabeth`s Pocket Pistol (named after Queen Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen) is now housed in the Naafi Restaurant building, a few yards to the left.
Queen Elizabeth Road itself lies between the above-mentioned terrace and the bottom of the bank with the brown bushes on.
Dover Castle is an English Heritage site.
Abridged from The English Heritage Trail:
Dover Castle
Dover Castle appears in "Dover in World War Two: 1942", a ten minute British Ministry of Information film, released by the US Office of War Information, and narrated by the American journalist, Edward R. Murrow.
John Latter / Jorolat
Dover Blog: The Psychology of a Small Town
This is the Images of Dover website: click on any blue "John Latter" link to access the Entry Page.
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The Court's Folly East Tower (on the right) has a tree and associated ivy vines growing from its base that have completely engulfed the top of the tower, spread along part of the (unseen) East Wall, and begun tumbling down into the roofless interior.
Other than that, and bearing in mind this wide-angled offset photo was taken by standing on an overgrown cliff-face, this is probably the most complete view of the front facade that it is possible to get.
The best position, maybe, but note that I make no similar claims about the quality of the photo :)
This is the second photo of the Court's Folly taken since 2007. All other photos on this website are currently of that vintage, but no doubt I'll be adding to the original collection now that I have a better camera.
Other 2009 photos of this location:
The West Tower and Upper Floor of the Court`s Folly, Kent, UK
A 2007 video slideshow, titled "Dover's 'Lost Castle': The Court's Folly", contains nearly 80 photos of the location and immediate surroundings. It's available on both Google and YouTube, with YouTube giving the better picture.
Standard Info for the Court's Folly
Click on the "Folly" tag to see all images of this location.
The "Court's Folly", in the shape of Dover Castle's Keep, was built on the cliffs below the Western Heights in the early 1800s by two Wine Merchants, Stephen and Rogers Court of 140 Snargate Street, Dover, and it was a tourist attraction of its day. For much of its history, however, this 'miniature castle' has been neglected and its ruins are now hidden behind the trees and other undergrowth which cover this part of the cliff-face. Access to the site is 'difficult'.
More information on the Court's Folly can be found at this Dover Museum webpage which states:
The internal dimensions of the Court's Folly are approximately 10.5 feet by 20 feet. Having said that, the external length of the East Wall is actually about 13 - 14 feet with the last 3 feet or so containing a horizontal oval recess. This extension is probably for cosmetic or structural purposes only because there's no indication of there being anything beyond the inner rear wall. The front wall is 16 inches thick and is over 20 feet high.
Basically, the miniature castle can be described as being two storeys high but only one 'room' deep. The bottom floor faces on to a narrow ledge and there is an upper terrace on the west side (to the left when looking from the front) of [the upper floor.
Shots taken below the bottom ledge do show both floors of the structure but those taken from the upper west terrace give the impression it is a single storey building.
Because of the trees and undergrowth - particularly where it has completely engulfed the East Tower - it is impossible to get a shot of the whole of the front of the building. The most you can see is the central section or the western two thirds. These shots (except for close-ups) were taken by standing on the cliff-face itself which made the experience 'interesting'.
The front is largely intact. Only part of the west wall remains but it does so to its full height. The east wall has a doorway and the height of the wall - complete with crenellations - decreases progressively from front to rear. It is impossible to stand more than two feet outside of the east wall without employing some form of levitation.
Looking into the 'castle' from the front, only the lower half of the right-hand part of the rear wall is still standing and includes a chimney course (along with sooty residue).
The roof and first floor have collapsed and in-filled the building almost to the sills of the bottom floor windows. There is an underground cistern on the west side of the folly.
Extract from Cliff Wine Vaults (abridged):
The Court's Folly was featured in the July 2007 issue of the e-Bulletin of The Folly Fellowship.
The above was originally posted on November 5, 2007
Added on January 3, 2008:
A similar view of the photo on this page also appears in BBC Kent's 'Gallery of the Month' for December 2007.
The Court's Folly is very near to the Pilot`s Meadow Allotments at the top of Adrian Street).
In 1852, however, Pilot's Meadow was still a meadow and it was here that Charles Dickens used to relax as he continued to write "Bleak House" during his stay in Dover. See the Dover: Indian Mutiny, Charles Dickens, Roman Empire photo for more information.
In those days, it is almost certain that the Court's Folly was still accessible from Pilot's Meadow.
The Court's Folly is close to, but below, where a moat from the Drop Redoubt reaches the cliff edge.
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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John Latter, on March 16, 2009, said:
See the 64 Steps from the Lower Path photo.
John Latter / Jorolat
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