Selsey listening post sold

Various e-mails have arrived this week telling me that the sound mirror in East Beach Road at Selsey in Sussex which was up for sale has been bought. Known locally as the Listening Post, this acoustic mirror is unique as the only one to have been converted into a house! The garden was in a bit of state – it “looked like a jungle” says one local – but apparently it is now being cleared.

The Selsey Community Website records

The Listening Post was in April 1999 [12 March 1999 according to Images of England] recognised as a Grade 2 Listed building. During the 1st World War a listening post was built in Selsey at East Beach to provide early warning of approaching Zepplins. The structure took the form of an “acoustic mirror” which was built of concrete and shaped like a modern satellite dish. The structure survived and is currently the subject of great interest due to its rarity.

Roger Whitehead has a couple of photos of it on Flickr.

The relevant Images of England page says:

SZ 5289 SE SELSEY EAST BEACH ROAD (North side) 23/10031 Number 2, The Listening Post II Sound mirror, now incorporated within house. 1916, converted into house by late 1930s. Sound mirror built of reinforced concrete, the shuttered lifts to the exterior clearly visible. House has slate-clad stud walls and corrugated asbestos roof, with 2-window front and window inserted into left-side wall; extensions to rear and right. INTERIOR: curved profile to mirror wall. HISTORY: This house incorporates a complete example of a sound mirror, built in 1916 (recorded as under construction in March of that year) and one of a series of listening posts built for the Admiralty along the south-east and north-east coasts. The attacks by the German Fleet on east coast ports in December 1914 had alerted the Admiralty to the need to provide early warning of future raids, soon underlined by the threat posed by Zeppellins to British ports and urban areas. The sound signal was reflected by the dish, via a duty observer armed with a stethoscope, to a microphone which enabled the course of the intruder to be plotted. These signal stations thus formed a precursor to the development of radar from 1936. Due to the obsolescence of the technology from the late 1930s, and later coastal clearance work and urbanisation, very few examples (such as Fulwell in Sunderland and the Hythe/Dungeness group in Kent) have survived. It also bears a very direct relationship, through its form and design, to its intended use and thus its technological and historical context. Source: (Chichester Observer, March 1916).

Sound mirror at Seaham?

Vernon Prior writes:

I left Seaham in 1947 and have rarely been back. I do remember as a child, however, playing around an acoustic mirror (complete with metal rod for supporting the microphone) situated on the high ground (Kinley or Kilney Hill) to the south west of Dawdon, Seaham Harbour. Having looked at the photographs, I can report that it was similar to the Sunderland example in terms of shape and size. I have no idea what state it might be in now, or even if it still exists.

Anyone got any ideas? Let me know! Looking at a map, it would make sense for there to be a mirror in the area, as it would be in the “gap” along the coast between the mirror at Sunderland and the now demolished mirror said to have existed at Clavering, Hartlepool.

UPDATE 15 March 2008: I’ve just rediscovered a previous post about Seaham. It looks like there is agreement on its existence – now we just need to find it!

Possible Felixstowe sound mirror?

Tom Barrett e-mails to say that at Felixstowe there was a wall type mirror similar to the one at Denge, on a piece of land adjoining the remains of an old fort and martello tower at Felixstowe on the bank of the river Orwell about 1.5 miles upstream from Landgaurd fort. This was a great area for us schoolboys and we were very intrigued when the construction began around 1934. I suspect that it had a very short life as I seem to remember that it had been removed at the time WW2. The area is now completly covered by the Felixstowe container port.

Anyone else know of this?

Marske aerodrome

Perusing a 1963 Ordnance Survey map, I noticed a long-gone bit of railway which I’d never noticed before, running off the Middlesbrough – Saltburn line at Ryehill Farm between Redcar and Marske. A bit of Googling finds references to Marske aerodrome, complete with photos of the sound mirror from 1983.

Plus some more pictures of the Marske mirror

My photos of the Marske mirror

More photos of Abbot’s Cliff

Another photo of the Abbot’s Cliff mirror between Folkestone and Dover, take in June by Hilary who says “Fascinated as we had never seen one before.  Now planning to check some others out.” Abbott's Cliff sound mirror

Shepway council has a general view of the cliff but the mirror isn’t visible.

Meanwhile, an architect in Seattle e-mails to say An architect friend of mine sent me your link and to tell you the truth, I have found it fascinating. I couldn’t have even imagined anything such as this existing. The structures are unique, reminiscent of some ancient civilizion or culture. I was absolutely intrigued by the construction, form and design of the assemblage.