Tilbury Fort was constructed in the late 17th century, and replaced a
smaller blockhouse built during the reign of Henry VIII. Artillery was
now the dominant weapon and the fort was designed to withstand an artillery
bombardment, built low lying with earth embankments fronted by brick.
The heaviest guns were mounted along the river bank to protect the Thames
from hostile shipping. The landward side was defended by a double line
of moats that kept enemy guns at a distance, and brick revetted bastions
at the corners of the fort that allowed its own guns to provide complete
covering fire in front of the walls. This style of fortification, known
as the bastion system, was popular in Europe at the time, and Tilbury
remains the best preserved example in Britain. Unfortunately this is best
seen from above, but aerial photographs exhibited at the fort show the
defences clearly.
The fort remained garrisoned into the 1920's, but its defences were never
put to the test. Its sole military success came when its anti-aircraft
guns shot down a German Zeppelin during the First World War.
Photographs
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