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Field Visit

Date 20 October 2016

Event ID 1016910

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1016910

Nothing is now visible of this machine-gun post, the site of which lies within an area of ground that has been cultivated since the end of the Second World War. It stood on the N side of the battery, between the fences that formerly defined the limits of the gun-battery itself and its outermost perimeter. The emplacement is not depicted on an RAF aerial photograph dated 10 February 1941 (RAF 614.C), but it is shown on a slightly later photograph dated 21 October 1941 (RAF 7977.C309) as a roughly oval feature measuring approximately 8m from ENE to WSW, with an entrance gap in its NNW side. The emplacement is also depicted on a site-plan contained within the Fort Record Book (National Archives: WO 192/113) which details the ‘Infantry Defence Posts’ within the Toward Battery. This emplacement was ‘No. 7 Post covering NW approaches’. The plan also notes that No. 7 Post was a ‘Hotchkiss Gun Post’.

Visited by HES Survey and Recording (JRS, AK, AMcC) 20 October 2016.

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