Dover



Crabble Corn Mill - Day outCrabble Corn Mill
Dover Castle and the Secret Wartime Tunnels - Day outDover Castle and the Secret Wartime Tunnels
Dover Museum and Bronze Age Boat Gallery - Day outDover Museum and Bronze Age Boat Gallery
Knights Templar Church - Day outKnights Templar Church
MacFarlane’s Nurseries, Garden Centre and World of Butterflies   - Day outMacFarlane’s Nurseries, Garden Centre and World of Butterflies
Pines Calyx Visitor Centre and Museum - Day outPines Calyx Visitor Centre and Museum
Roman Painted House  - Day outRoman Painted House
South Foreland Lighthouse - Day outSouth Foreland Lighthouse
St. Margaret’s Museum - Day outSt. Margaret’s Museum
The Grand Shaft - Day outThe Grand Shaft
Western Heights - Day outWestern Heights

The Grand Shaft

the grand shaft 1
The Grand Shaft
The Grand Shaft
Snargate Street
Dover
CT15 7PD

Tel: 01304 823 926
E-Mail:

Web:

About The Grand Shaft

The Grand Shaft is a unique structure in the Western Heights and a very rare example of a triple spiral staircase in fortifications of the same age (early 1800s). When work began in earnest on the Western Heights, it soon became apparent that rapid troop movement from the cliff top to street level was greatly hindered by the distance that the men would have to cover. If an attacking force had tried to make a landing on the harbour or beach at Dover, troops on the Heights would have had to make their way along from the Drop Redoubt or Citadel to the original South Entrance (now the site of the Western Heights Roundabout), along what is now Snargate Street to meet the enemy; a route of almost a mile and a half, when troops were barracked only some 300 feet above sea level!

This was hardly an ideal scenario and in 1804 construction started on the Grand Shaft, which had been designed by Lieutenant-Colonel William Twiss. The triple staircase itself is 140ft deep and at the base is a tunnel leading out to a guard room and from there out into the town. At the top is a further single staircase leading up to the parade ground of the Grand Shaft Barracks. This top staircase is inside what is known as the bowl, and was excavated out of the cliff top. The shaft itself was then dug vertically through the cliff and revetted with brick. Windows line the central shaft to allow light into the staircases, approximately every 30 stairs.

As the threat of invasion passed, the Grand Shaft became something of a local attraction, and there are stories of a Mr William Leith of Deal riding his horse up the Grand Shaft for a wager! What is clear is that in the Georgian period, there were no class distinctions attached to the triple staircase. It was simply to ensure rapid troop movement, when men of all ranks would have been deployed down any and all of the staircases in the event of an enemy attack. However, as the Victorian period progressed, class distinction became ever more apparent, and while no definitive documentation exists, the most popular theory states that the staircases were divided into "Officers and their Ladies", "Sergeants and their Wives" and "Soldiers and their Women". This has been supported by the fact that the Queen’s Regulations of the time clearly stated that there was to be no off-duty fraternisation between the ranks.

As well as carrying troops, the Grand Shaft also had to carry the drainage from the Grand Shaft Barracks above. This had rather unpleasant consequences, and it was noted in a commission of 1858 that each time the privies were flushed, the force of the water would force sewer gas up through traps into the shaft, but also unfortunately into houses! The commission noted that a large tank with a foul air pipe was needed at the bottom of the shaft to counteract such obnoxious fumes!

The guard room at the bottom of the shaft was part of a walled compound, which was found by the 1858 to be hopelessly inadequate as it was far too small to serve any function effectively. The original guardroom, coal bunker and ash pit were therefore demolished and a new compound constructed with an Officer’s guard room, two cells and a latrine and a gas meter house, which indicates the time that gas lighting was introduced to the Western Heights. Today only the gas meter house remains; all other structures were demolished.



User Comments:

No Comments Yet - Why not be the first to leave a comment

Leave Your Comment:

Comment Form

Would you like to leave a comment? Why not to comment on and rate this day out.

Would you like to leave a comment? Why not to comment on and rate this day out.

Every effort is made to make sure that all the information is correct but we strongly recommend that you call The Grand Shaft before you set off on your day out to confirm opening times and admission prices.

Please also note that the position on Google maps for The Grand Shaft is a rough estimate using their postcode in the database and might be slightly out.

It may also be worth clicking the web link for The Grand Shaft to see if there are any special events coming up or currently on.