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Latitude: 54.8622 / 54°51'43"N
Longitude: -1.4535 / 1°27'12"W
OS Eastings: 435175
OS Northings: 552073
OS Grid: NZ351520
Mapcode National: GBR LD96.3T
Mapcode Global: WHD5J.N11W
Plus Code: 9C6WVG6W+VH
Entry Name: Pillbox at NZ 3517552073
Listing Date: 8 January 2008
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1392382
English Heritage Legacy ID: 504124
ID on this website: 101392382
Location: Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, DH4
County: Sunderland
Electoral Ward/Division: Copt Hill
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Traditional County: Durham
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Tyne and Wear
Church of England Parish: Herrington, Penshaw and Shiney Row
Church of England Diocese: Durham
Tagged with: Pillbox
456/0/10004 Pillbox at NZ 3517552073
08-JAN-08
GV II
Pillbox, one of a pair on an inland stop-line constructed in 1940-41 of reinforced concrete.
PLAN: an elongated hexagon with a main and rear front and a flat roof.
EXTERIOR: single storey and partly lying below ground level. The elongated front has a central machine gun embrasure flanked by single rifle embrasures with a single machine gun embrasure to each chamfered side. The rear front has a protected doorway with two rifle embrasures to one side and one to the other with a rifle and machine gun embrasure to each chamfered side.
INTERIOR: there is a thick detached concrete wall in a central position within the pillbox intended to prevent ricocheting bullets within the pillbox. Beneath each of the machine gun embrasures, there is a roughly square hole, which formerly contained the mounting for a supportive machines gun mount.
SUNSIDIARY FEATURES: a second pillbox lies c. 0.9km to the north and both examples lie on a former anti-invasion stop line.
HISTORY: from May 1940 to February 1942, inland defence hinged on the use of major anti-tank stop-lines intended to slow down an anticipated invasion from occupied France. Stop lines comprised a variety of defensive features including pillboxes, ditches and barbed wire. Pillboxes were usually built by local soldiers in various defensive locations and aimed to accommodate rifles or light machine guns and although the War Office issued twelve standard pillbox designs, in practice, many unofficial designs arose out of local considerations and preferences. The pillbox at Stony Gate is one of a pair, which survives on a stop line that ringed the city of Sunderland and aimed to protect the town's western hinterland in the event of an east coast invasion. Analysis of old mapping shows that the pillbox was located on a former enclosure boundary, now removed.
SOURCES: I Brown et al 20th Century Defences in Britain 1996;
C S Dobinson 1996 Twentieth Century Fortifications in England Anti-invasion defences of WWII. CBA.
REASON FOR DESIGNATION:
This Second World War pillbox is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* It is an example of a type of pillbox which is exclusively north eastern and is rare in a national context
* It is situated on a defensive stop-line and has group value with an adjacent pillbox
* It illustrates the strategic approach to anti-invasion defences in the hinterland of an important industrial town during the Second World War
* It is a well-preserved example of its type whose form clearly illustrates its intended function.
NZ3517552073
* It is an example of a type of pillbox which is exclusively north eastern and is rare in a national context
* It is situated on a defensive stop-line and has group value with an adjacent pillbox
* It illustrates the strategic approach to anti-invasion defences in the hinterland of an important industrial town during the Second World War
* It is a well-preserved example of its type whose form clearly illustrates its intended function.
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