EAW022216 ENGLAND (1949). Sandown Pier and the town, Sandown, from the south-west, 1949. This image has been produced from a print.

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Nearby Images (14)

EAW022216
  0° 0m
EPW043029
  95° 33m
EPW039671
  14° 37m
EAW038580
  66° 146m
EAW038583
  79° 151m
EAW038582
  53° 180m
EPW023085
  23° 204m
EPW023083
  21° 210m
EPW023084
  84° 215m
EPW043028
  14° 221m
EAW022219
  24° 230m
EPW039672
  51° 230m
EAW022215
  76° 237m
EPW023080
  74° 253m

Details

Title [EAW022216] Sandown Pier and the town, Sandown, from the south-west, 1949. This image has been produced from a print.
Reference EAW022216
Date 17-April-1949
Link
Place name SANDOWN
Parish SANDOWN
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 459706, 83847
Longitude / Latitude -1.1553579136316, 50.650660333965
National Grid Reference SZ597838

Pins

Coastguard Lookout

Matt Aldred edob.mattaldred.com
Tuesday 9th of March 2021 03:30:59 PM
PILLBOX: S0012126

Matt Aldred edob.mattaldred.com
Monday 30th of November 2020 09:52:51 PM
Looks like a WW2 battery observation post

@dcforts
Saturday 4th of January 2020 07:28:10 PM
Sandown Granite Fort. This was built between April 1861 and September 1864 at a cost of £73,876. The fort was constructed from brick at the back and granite with iron armour plating at the front. It was initially armed with eight 10" and four 9" R.M.L. canons (rifled muzzled loaded), but only after several years' delay. The fort's armaments were removed in 1904 as these were now obsolete and the building could not be adapted to take latest design of weapons. The fort was sold in 1930 and the brick back demolished. In WW2, a pill box was built on top. As part of the preparations for invasion of France in 1944, 14 pumps were installed in the fort; eleven in the empty casemates and the other three in remaining buildings at the back of the fort. These were all connected with a further two pumps in the dummy ice cream parlour on the other side of the Grand Hotel. These pumps were used to deliver petrol through PLUTO, a 70 mile long, 3" diameter, underwater pipe from Shanklin Chine to Cherbourg. This was in operation from 12th August 1944. Sources: http://www.victorianforts.co.uk/pdf/datasheets/sandowngranite.pdf http://h2g2.com/edited_entry/A83151092 See also image EAW038579

Kentishman
Thursday 13th of August 2015 04:01:27 PM
The Grand Hotel, Sandown. In 1944, the basement of this hotel housed the control room for the PLUTO line, pumping petrol through the underwater pipe line to Cherbourg.

Kentishman
Thursday 13th of August 2015 08:50:24 AM
Dummy ice cream parlour, built to house two of the 16 PLUTO (Pipeline Under The Ocean) line pumps, providing an underwater fuel supply to Allied forces in Normandy after D Day. The petrol ran through a specially developed 3 inch pipe via Shanklin Chine to Cherbourg. The pipe was laid on the 12th August 1944.

Kentishman
Thursday 13th of August 2015 08:46:56 AM

User Comment Contributions

Image includes several buildings that were vital parts of PLUTO, the Pipeline Under The Ocean, supplying petrol to the Allied forces in Normandy after the D Day invasion.

Kentishman
Thursday 13th of August 2015 10:56:29 AM