Tilbury
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Tilbury is located on the north bank of the River Thames, in the borough of Thurrock in England, at the point where the river suddenly narrows to about 800 yards/740 metres in width.
Tilbury has a deep water port, a fort and was the site of an important ferry to Gravesend on the south bank of the river.
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History
Queen Elizabeth I unwisely placed her main army at Tilbury (see Speech to the Troops at Tilbury) where they would have found it difficult to cross the river and prevent the attacking Spanish army from capturing London after it had been landed in Kent by the Armada.
Fort
Forts at Tilbury were an important defence of London, particularly during the Spanish Armada and the Anglo-Dutch Wars. The first permanent fort at Tilbury was a D-shaped blockhouse built in 1539 by Henry VIII and designed to cross-fire with a similar blockhouse across the River at Gravesend, Kent.
At the time of the 1588 Armada scare the Earl of Leicester wrote: "I went often to this fort at Tylbury, which I find further out of order than the other [Gravesend] save that there be some better peces of artyllery but not a platforme to carry the least pece'. Queen Elizabeth I delivered her famous Armada speech at the army camp near the fort but, fearing a renewed attack in 1589, Italian engineer Federigo Gianibelli and Thomas Bedwell built outworks around the Tilbury blockhouse including a ditch and counterscarp bank together with a timber drawbridge. 1,500 fir poles were used for palisading and a boom of ships' masts, chains and cables was stretched across the Thames to Gravesend anchored to lighters.
The fort fell into neglect again and did not feature in the English Civil War. In 1651 its garrison was a governor, a lieutenant, an ensign, four corporals, one drummer, a master gunner, 16 matrosses [gunner's mates] and 44 soldiers.
Following the English Civil war Kings Charles II was exiled in Holland where he was influenced by European advances in military architecture. Following the disasterous 1667 Dutch attack on the English fleet moored on the nearby Medway - Charles II set in motion the re-fortification of the site by employing Dutchman Sir Bernard De Gomme who had been engineer in the Royalist army during the civil war and who followed Charles into exile.
Work started on the current fort in 1670 but was conducted slowly often with the use of pressed labour from nearby towns and was still continuing in the 1680s. De Gomme's plan was for a pentagon with projecting bastions facing west, north west, north east and east and a planned river bastion facing directly south. Henry VIII's blockhouse was retained. Major features such as the imposing Water Gate were not complete until about 1682. The river bastion never materialised.
As well as the brick fort there was an earth and brick gunline along the river bank. In 1715 there were 31 demi cannon and one culverin in the East Gun Line and 17 demi cannon and 26 culverins in the West Gun Line. Two huge huge powder magazines [housing 3,600 barrels each] were built in the centre of the fort in 1716 but the same year many of the 161 guns surveyed were declared unserviceable and effective strength was found to be just 60 pieces. In 1724 Daniel Defoe estimated there were 100 guns ranging from 24-pounder to 46-pounder: "A battery so terrible as well imports the consequence of the place".
Highland prisoners captured after the Battle of Culloden in 1746 were held at Tilbury while a cricket match in 1776 between men from the Kent and Essex sides of the Thames ended in bloodshed when guns were seized from the guardroom; an Essex man was shot dead, an elderly invalid was bayonetted and a sergeant was shot trying to quell the riot. The Napoleonic invasion scare of 1803 saw the Royal Trinity House Volunteer Artillery manning 10 armed hulks across the Thames at Tilbury.
Nineteenth century improvements in metallurgy and artillery firepower saw extensive re-design and re-modelling along the fort's riverside, much of it overseen by Captain Charles Gordon [1833-85] later known as 'Gordon of Khartoum'. The 17th century walls were re-inforced and earth was embanked on the outside to protect the brickwork from the effect of modern high velocity guns. Emplacements were built for 9-inch muzzle-loaders on top of the bastions and these new works became the primary gunline angled more to the south east to engage ships well down stream. The Henry VIII blockhouse was demolished.
The Victorian modernisation was, in due course, partly built over again prior to the 1914-18 war and it is these later concrete emplacements and expense magazines which visitors see today on the south-east curtain.
The fort's sole miltary success was in the First World War when anti-aircraft guns on the parade ground shot down a Zeppelin airship. Bombing damage in the Second World War destroyed the 18th century solders' barrack block but the officers' terrace still survives. De-mobilised in 1950 and placed in the care of the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works and opened to the public, the site is now cared for by English Heritage.
The fort has several interesting features. The Water Gate [circa 1682] is an ornate opening in the south wall allowing access to the quay on the river. The outer defences consist of two wet moats, a ravelin and a redan.
There is a separate fort at Coalhouse, East Tilbury, which has a Napoleonic and Victorian history.
Docks
The docks at Tilbury operated as London's passenger liner terminal until the 1960s.
Today the port handles a variety of cargo, containers and passenger liner traffic and remains, along with Southampton and Felixstowe, one of Britain's three major ports.
Transport
Tilbury has two railway stations on the c2c (London, Tilbury and Southend) rail route:
Tilbury Riverside railway station was closed in 1993 and a bus service now connects Tilbury Town railway station and the ferry to Gravesend.