Maunsell Navy Fort "Tongue Sands"

Local nameMaunsell Navy Fort "Tongue Sands"
LocationEngland, UK

The Maunsell Forts are towers built in the Thames and Mersey estuaries during the Second World War to help defend the United Kingdom. They were operated as army and navy forts, and named for their designer, Guy Maunsell. The forts were decommissioned during the late 1950s and later used for other activities including pirate radio broadcasting. One of the forts is managed by the unrecognised Principality of Sealand; boats visit the remaining forts occasionally, and a consortium named Project Redsands is planning to conserve the fort situated at Red Sands. The aesthetic attraction of the Maunsell forts has been considered to be associated with the aesthetics of decay, transience and nostalgia.

During the summers of 2007 and 2008 Red Sands Radio, a station commemorating the pirate radio stations of the 1960s, operated from the Red Sands fort on 28-day Restricted Service Licences. The fort was subsequently declared unsafe, and Red Sands Radio has moved its operations ashore to Whitstable.

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The British Army in the… @ Tanner (Lt), War Office official photographer
 

More information and contact

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maunsell_Forts

Coordinates 51°29'55.005" N 1°22'10.994" E

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