Mind's Eye Kents Issue 3

Page 19

Image source: Derlictplaces Image source: Derlictplaces

FREYA HOWELL salutes the last bastion of Kent’s Napoleonic defences but laments its slow surrender to time.

B The gaping space between the towering partitions now accommodates a sea of dust and unruly vegetation.

Image source: Derlictplaces

lazing neon letters stand out against the bleached and crumbling walls, so you would never have guessed this very spot was once the front line against the French. The gaping space between the towering partitions now accommodates a sea of dust and unruly vegetation that seems intent on overwhelming the monumental structure. Light still floods in, but not like before. Now the land is slowly taking back its own. The creepers worm their way through the gun ports, their historical violence now neutralised by the green of spring. Dover’s Detached Bastion was one of Kent’s most recognisable structures in the early 1800s. The Napoleonic Wars were in full swing at the time that this impressive fortress was built to stand as the defence the South East urgently needed to thwart Napoleon’s aspirations to march on London.

Image source: Derlictplaces

Once a site of immense significance, the Bastion now stands in solitude, nature reclaiming the land. The whole site is still intact, but now surrounded by a lively green forest. Rather than gunfire and falling bombs, its ultimate enemy is now the passage of time.

RATHER THAN GUNFIRE AND FALLING BOMBS, ITS ULTIMATE ENEMY IS NOW THE PASSAGE OF TIME.

Mind’s Eye Kent | January 2020

19


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.