Monday, 11 October 2010

Martello Tower - Jersey

The Governor of Jersey, General Sir Henry Seymour Conway, decided to build 30 round towers to protect the island's coastline. The inspiration for these towers came from an ancient stone tower in the Bay of Martella in Corsica which held out against a British naval attack. They were round as this shape was regarded as stronger than square ones. The only square tower to be built in Jersey was Seymour Tower. It would take the British Navy 16 years to realize their defensive value and begin to construct Martello Towers along the south coast of England.

However Jersey’s round towers are unique as unlike their English counterparts they have a more elegant design with tall tapering walls. In addition they are generally constructed of local granite and have mâchicolations- projecting beak like structures high up on the towers and walls) allowing the defenders to protect the base of the tower. The ground floor was used to store ammunition and weapons whilst the upper floor housed up to ten troops and their commanding officer.
The other modification made by Conway was to locate a battery at the base though later versions, such as
Kempt Tower at St. Ouen, had a cannon mounted on a revolving platform on the roof. These are the only 'true' Martello Towers though all of the towers of this period are popularly and incorrectly referred to as Martello Towers.
When Conway died in 1795, 22 of the planned towers had been completed and a further tower, La Rocco, was ready to construct.
After Napoleon and his forces were decimated in Russia the threat from France receeded and in 1837 one of the last towers to be built in Europe, Victoria Tower on the east coast of the island, was the also the last of these fortifications to be built in Jersey.

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