Site Records
Site Name: Dover Castle: 'Annex/Casemate/Dumpy' Levels - RSG 12 / SRC 6.2
Dover Castle
Dover
Kent
Built in 1941 under a series of tunnels dug during the Napoleonic Wars.
The Napoleonic tunnels were put into service by Admiral Ramsey to command
Operation Dynamo. The 1941 tunnels are known as Dumpy.
A mirror of Dumpy was constructed just below the Napoleonic
tunnels but was abandoned owing to a fault in the chalk.
Dumpy served as a joint service headquarters. At its heart
was a two-storey galleried operations room used to control operations
of all three services in the northern channel area. Dumpy remained
in use until the mid 1950s as a fortress, plotting room and NATO communications
centre, until the demise of coastal artillery and the building of the
NATO Ace High tropospheric scatter communications system.
Dumpy was abandoned until 1962 when the Home Office moved in and took
over. The underground works became RSG12. By far the largest of the RSGs, it also
spread to the upper levels, taking in the W.W.II dressing station which was built
above the Napoleonic works and which became the dormitory area for RSG 12 and
later SRC 6.2. The complex was variously placed under care and maintenance and
reactivated depending on which government was in power throughout the 60s, 70s
and early 80s.
Eventually money and the Soviet SS20 spelled the end of Dover as an SRC. When
Dover became an RSG in 1962 the air conditioning to service the complex was rebuilt
and switched on. It ran continually throughout its service and is still running.
Without it the tunnels would be unusable even in peacetime. Simply heating and
keeping the place aerated was extremely expensive. Besides, Dover was now the
main reinforcement port for the BAOR and in itself a major target for Soviet SS20s
(apparently the target for 1 sea burst and 2 ground bursts of 150kT each). The
site was stripped, abandoned and handed over to English Heritage. Operations were
transferred to the new RGHQ at Crowborough.
English Heritage intends to reopen the SRC at some point in the future for
an 'anniversary of the Cuban Crisis' - even though the site was almost certainly
not manned during this period. If the restoration is as good as the rest of the
tunnel system it will be well worth waiting for.
Home Page
Last updated 18th January 2002
© 1997-2002 Subterranea Britannica
|