Milldam Barracks
Milldam Barracks | |
---|---|
Portsmouth | |
Coordinates | 50°47′49″N 1°05′58″W / 50.79693°N 1.09954°W |
Type | Barracks |
Site history | |
Built | c. 1800 |
Built for | Board of Ordnance |
In use | c.1800-1969 |
Garrison information | |
Garrison | Portsmouth Garrison |
Occupants | Corps of Royal Engineers |
Milldam Barracks is a former a military installation at Portsmouth, Hampshire. The complex includes two Grade II listed buildings.[1][2]
History
[edit]Milldam here refers to a mill pond which used to extend across a large area, 'many acres in extent', between Old Portsmouth and Portsea.[3] It was used to drive a tidal mill, of medieval origin, which was rebuilt by one Thomas Beeston after 1574 and sold to the Crown in the early 1700s (after which it was known as the King's Mill).[4] Standing within the fortifications and protected by its own 'Mill Redoubt' it produced flour for the Victualling Commissioners of the Royal Navy. When the Gunwharf was built, the mill and a channel to the mill pond was preserved within it.[5]
Not long after 1800 the mill pond was reconfigured and reduced in area, and a large brick building (pictured) was built on part of the reclaimed ground.[3] It served as offices (and adjoining stores) for the Royal Engineer department of the Garrison, which at the time was responsible for all building works and for upkeep of the fortifications. (Barrack accommodation at this time was provided separately, at Landport.) In 1834 the decision was taken to put future garrison engineering works out to contract: the local detachment of Sappers and Miners departed, their barracks at Landport were sold and the store buildings at Milldam were let.[6] A small staff of just 'one or two officers and foremen of work' were retained, however, to superintend the work of the contractors.[6]
The neighbouring building (now known as Milldam House) was built in 1846 to serve as the Royal Engineers' Office (as inscribed on a stone shield above the front door).[2] The Commanding Royal Engineer, Portsmouth was based here,[7] and the complex as a whole was described at the time as 'the offices and workshops of the Ordnance department, to which belongs the superintendence and repair of all castles, forts and fortifications in the south-west district of England'.[8]
By 1865 soldiers' quarters had been added to the site, which also contained a variety of workshops, stores and other amenities arranged around two open spaces.[9] The King's Mill burned down in 1868, after which the mill pond was filled in;[4] the recovered land went on to serve as a Recreation Ground for the non-commissioned officers and men of the garrison (and for the officers, who were provided with a cricket ground on part of the site).[10]
During the First World War the Tyne Electrical Engineers telephone section, based at Milldam Barracks, became responsible for the entire military telephone system for the Southern Coast Defences, including Portsmouth, Southampton and the Isle of Wight. The skills of the former submarine miners were employed when a cable linking the sea forts had to be repaired.[11] A set of sixteen Married Soldiers' Quarters were added to the site in 1917.[12] The barracks continued to be the base of the Commanding Royal Engineer, Wessex Area (East) during the inter-war period.[13] After the Second World War the barracks continued to be home to technical units such as the Weapons Systems Tuning Group.[14]
The barracks complex eventually became surplus to requirements and it was decommissioned in 1969. In 1976-7 most of the buildings were acquired by Portsmouth Polytechnic and today they house the School of Social and Historical Studies of the University of Portsmouth.[15] Milldam House, on the other hand, was acquired by Portsmouth City Council and serves as the Portsmouth Register Office.[16]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Historic England. "University of Portsmouth, School of Social and Historic Studies (1386913)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
- ^ a b Historic England. "Mill Dam House (1386911)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ a b Slight, Henry & Julian (1828). Chronicles of Portsmouth. London: Lupton Relfe.
- ^ a b Underwood, Michael (2015). Gunwharf Quays, Portsmouth: The history, architecture, conservation and development of a remarkable military site. Portsmouth: Tricorn Books. p. 68.
- ^ "The Portsmouth Encyclopaedia" (PDF). Portsmouth City Libraries. 2011. p. 31.
- ^ a b "Correspondence from the Principal Ports and Stations". The United Service Magazine: 387. March 1834.
- ^ "To builders, Royal Engineer's Office, Portsmouth" (PDF). Hampshire Telegraph and Sussex Chronicle. 18 November 1854. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ The New Portsmouth, Southsea, Anglesey, and Hayling Island Guide (4th ed.). Portsmouth: W. H. Charpentier. 1846. p. 62.
- ^ King, Alan. "The Portsmouth Encyclopaedia A History of Places and People in Portsmouth, with an Index to Streets" (PDF). Portsmouth City Council. Portsmouth City Libraries. p. 65. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
- ^ White, William (1878). History, Gazetteer and Directory of the County of Hampshire. London: Simpkin, Marshall & Company. p. 381.
- ^ Short et al., p. 74.
- ^ "Barracks". Report of the Imperial Shipping Committee. 4: 34. 1917.
- ^ "Lulworth Tank Corps, Gunnery School Ranges: Bye-laws" (PDF). War Office. 1929. p. 7. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ "Weapons Systems Tuning Group Reunion". Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ "Milldam Building". University of Portsmouth. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- ^ "Marriages & civil partnerships". Portsmouth City Council. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
Sources
[edit]- Short, Major O.M., Sherlock, Major H., Perowne, Captain L.E.C.M., and Fraser, Lieutenant M.A., (1933) The History of the Tyne Electrical Engineers, Royal Engineers, 1884–1933, ISBN 1-84574-796-8.