Yarmouth Town Defenses
Has been described as a Possible Urban Defence
There are no visible remains
Name | Yarmouth Town Defenses |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Hampshire and the Isle of Wight |
Modern Authority | Isle of Wight |
1974 Authority | Isle of Wight |
Civil Parish | Yarmouth |
Bond lists Yarmouth as a site of new urban defensive circuit of 16th/early 17th century being encoded as C16 gates only; no remains visible; circumstantial or secondary evidence only; no archaeological excavation known.
The four gates of the town that are recorded in the early post-medieval period may have had a medieval origin. An illustration of the quay, dated 1801, shows a wall between the castle and a gateway at the end of Quay Street (Cole 1946, opposite p16). The wall, which still survives, appears to continue to the south and may have performed a defensive function. There is no evidence that the wall continued along the south and east side south of the town.
At the time of the building of the castle in the mid-sixteenth century the town had four gates; Quay or Sea Gate which was somewhere between Quay Street and Bridge Street, Outer Town Gate which was near the drawbridge, Inner Town Gate or East Gate near the top of High Street, and Hither Gate at the end of St James' Street (Page 1912, 286; Winter 1981, 22). There is, at present, no indication as to when the gates were built.
In 1662, when a French invasion was once more a possibility, Yarmouth was made into an Island. The Governor of the Island cut a passage around the eastern side of the town with the intention of making the town more defensible. It was two years before a drawbridge was built across the moat, and until its construction the townspeople had to cross the channel by boat (Winter 1981, 19). At least one of the courses of the Thorley Brook to the south of the town is embanked and appears to have been canalised and it may represent part of the seventeenth century moat. Almost connecting the Thorley Brook, and leading to the north-east, is a large drain that may also be part of the moat
The drain, lies in the hollow to the east of the town is located where it could be expected that the moat would lie and is clearly marked on Andrews' map of 1769 and Mudge's map of 1810. It is probable that the drawbridge would have been located where the road to the east from the town crossed this drain. (Hopkins 2004)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SZ354896 |
Latitude | 50.7055206298828 |
Longitude | -1.49925994873047 |
Eastings | 435400 |
Northings | 89600 |