Take a look inside the Maunsell Forts, a group of abandoned navy towers you can only reach by boat

August 2024 · 4 minute read

All over Europe, there are monuments to remember World War II, and miles off the coast of the England, there's one that not many know about. 

The Maunsell Army and Navy forts in the Thames Estuary once guarded the UK against bombs, but today, they are dilapidated, abandoned structures that you can only reach by boat. 

Keep scrolling to learn more about these forts and what they look like today. 

During World War II, London's ports were vulnerable to German bombings by air and by sea.

London 1940. ullstein bild Dtl./ Getty

The country needed to develop a plan to protect themselves from the Germans on the coast.  

The answer was to build forts out at sea so that foreign planes and boats could be destroyed before reaching the coastline.

The forts. Courtesy of Scott Amling

Guy Maunsell, a civil engineer in England, designed forts that could be built on land and then installed out at sea in 1942.

They were located eight miles off the coast and acted as guards.

The Redsand Fort still stands today. Google Maps

In all, there were four Navy forts and three Army forts placed in the Thames Estuary. The three Army forts were called Nore, Red Sands, and Shivering Sands. Only two still stand today.

The Army forts consisted of seven towers connected by steel walkways.

The forts and the steel walkways. Heritage Images/ Getty

Each of the towers stood on four concrete legs. The buildings on top of these legs were made of steel, had two floors, and measured 36 feet by 36 feet

Each of these forts housed weaponry and sleeping accommodations for the soldiers.

Solider on one of the forts in 1944. Popperfoto/ Getty

At any given time, there were 265 men living on each fort. For many, an assignment at the forts was cold, isolating, and long. 

The forts turned out to be successful in protecting the country from threats.

Soldiers playing Ludo, or "uckers," on one of the forts in 1944. Popperfoto/ Getty

While in operation, the forts shot down 22 planes and 30 bombs.

By the 1950s, the forts were abandoned, but they were given a second life in the '60s as radio headquarters.

The forts today. Courtesy of Scott Amling

They were pirate radio stations.

While some of the forts were destroyed by storms, others still stand in ruin today.

The forts today. Courtesy of Scott Amling

Although the buildings are still standing, they have remained unoccupied for decades.

If you take an hour boat ride off the coast of the UK, you can visit the waters surrounding the forts.

The forts in the distance. TomaszEER/ YouTube

Photographer Scott Amling took a boat out to the forts in 2018 and experienced the decaying buildings for himself. 

Although you can't go onto the forts anymore, it's clear these buildings are in varying states of decay.

The forts today. Barcroft Media/ Getty

"The forts had this rust and patina on the surface of the metal sides and you could see how they were constructed in plates riveted together," Amling told Insider. "The winter fog and lack of visibility added to the mystery of the forts."

The walkways that once connected the towers are now dilapidated.

The forts today. Barcroft Media/ Getty

The catwalks are no longer safe. 

Some parts of the steel forts are completely overrun with rust.

Inside the fort today. Barcroft Media/ Getty

"[It's] hard to imagine that men were stationed out there in these iron cans above the water firing anti-plane guns at the German bombers and mostly at night," Amling said. 

Although the buildings are in ruins, they still stand as a memorial to World War II — and the brave soldiers who served their country.

The forts today. Courtesy of Scott Amling

Even though they don't look like much these days, the Maunsell forts once helped keep the UK safe.

Read the original article on INSIDER. Copyright 2019.

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