Plymouth Blockhouse, Fishers Nose Tower
Has been described as a Certain Artillery Fort
There are masonry ruins/remnants remains
Name | Plymouth Blockhouse, Fishers Nose Tower |
Alternative Names | Lambhay Point; Queen Elizabeth's Tower |
Historic Country | Devonshire |
Modern Authority | Plymouth; City of |
1974 Authority | Devon |
Civil Parish | Plymouth |
Although depicted on a plot of 1540 as part of Henry VIII's coastal defences, the blockhouse may have been built in the late 15th century and modified in 1523. It is polygonal in plan, and was shown as two-storyed and crenellated with gun embrasures on the lower floor on the 1540 plot. It was incorporated into the lower fort of Plymouth Fort in 1595 and remained as part of the Lower Fort of the Royal Citadel from the 1660s. In 1716 it was renamed 'Queen Elizabeth's Tower'. Used as an Air Raid Protection Shelter during World War Two. It is architecturally different from the other Plymouth blockhouses as it has no granite embrasures. (PastScape)
Remains of tower built for coastal defence. c1537-39. Battered Plymouth limestone rubble walls with dressed granite quoins. Rectangular plan projecting to the west and returned back to the cliff at the east end. Part of a series of towers built in Plymouth during the reign of Henry VIII. (Listed Building Report)
Not scheduled
This is a Grade 2 listed building protected by law
Historic England Scheduled Monument Number
Historic England Listed Building number(s)
Images Of England
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SX481536 |
Latitude | 50.3629188537598 |
Longitude | -4.13635015487671 |
Eastings | 248150 |
Northings | 53630 |