EAW039859 ENGLAND (1951). The Anglo-Iranian Oil Co oil refinery under construction, Isle of Grain, from the south, 1951
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Details
Title | [EAW039859] The Anglo-Iranian Oil Co oil refinery under construction, Isle of Grain, from the south, 1951 |
Reference | EAW039859 |
Date | 20-August-1951 |
Link | |
Place name | ISLE OF GRAIN |
Parish | ISLE OF GRAIN |
District | |
Country | ENGLAND |
Easting / Northing | 587319, 175261 |
Longitude / Latitude | 0.6958521270204, 51.444823364194 |
National Grid Reference | TQ873753 |
Pins
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Monday 24th of January 2022 10:59:57 PM |
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Saturday 23rd of July 2016 10:36:42 AM |
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Thursday 21st of July 2016 08:32:02 AM |
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Thursday 21st of July 2016 08:30:44 AM |
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Friday 26th of June 2015 04:40:00 PM |
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Friday 26th of June 2015 02:40:24 PM |
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Friday 26th of June 2015 12:33:43 PM |
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Thursday 25th of June 2015 11:22:00 AM |
I've had a brief look at "Radar- A Wartime Miracle by Colin Latham & Anne Stobbs" Alan Sutton 1997. I can also find no reference to a Chain Home station at Grain. The mystery remains. |
Class31 |
Thursday 25th of June 2015 12:22:03 PM |
Bases of the masts are marked on the 1968 OS on Old Maps but they are not marked on the 1961 OS on the same website. |
Class31 |
Thursday 25th of June 2015 12:32:37 PM |
Mystery solved! These masts were part of the Grain Island Firing Point, also known as Yantlet Battery. They were constructed to measure the projectile speed of long range artillery and naval guns. See English Heritage Research Report 39-2013 by Matt Edgeworth: 'Grain Island Firing Point, Yantlet Creek, Isle of Grain, Medway. Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment.' |
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Friday 26th of June 2015 11:12:46 AM |
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Thursday 25th of June 2015 11:10:55 AM |
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Thursday 25th of June 2015 10:36:20 AM |
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Thursday 25th of June 2015 10:16:57 AM |
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Thursday 25th of June 2015 10:15:38 AM |
User Comment Contributions
See the map on page 7 of the English Heritage Research Report 39-2013 ( http://services.english-heritage.org.uk/ResearchReportsPdfs/039_2013WEB.pdf )for the locations of six Diver box light anti-aircraft batteries and a pillbox at Rosecourt Barn. Operation Diver took place between June and September 1944. Diver was the code name for the German V1 flying bomb and Operation Diver was the co-ordinated raft of measures to overcome the threat that the V1s / Doodlebugs posed. Up to this point in the war, anti-aircraft batteries were fixed and permanent. Under Diver, temporary, mobile batteries were set up and moved to the areas of perceived threat. As a consequence, very little evidence remains to show where these were. Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Diver#End_of_operations and http://services.english-heritage.org.uk/ResearchReportsPdfs/021_2013WEB.pdf |
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Saturday 23rd of July 2016 10:53:07 AM |
This image also shows the site of the QF fire decoy installed during 1940/41 the lure German bombers away from the oil storage facilities on the Medway. This is now one of only two such sites that remain in the country. See SECOND WORLD WAR OIL QF BOMBING DECOY ALLHALLOWS, MEDWAY, KENT by Fiona Small RESEARCH REPORT SERIES no. 8-2014 English Heritage |
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Saturday 23rd of July 2016 10:53:07 AM |