Southsea Castle

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Southsea Castle (50°46′41″N, 1°05′20″W) is one of Henry VIII's Device Forts, built on the waterfront at the southern end of Portsea Island (an area that later became named Southsea after the castle). The castle was built to guard the eastern entrance to the Solent and entrance to Portsmouth Harbour. Henry VIII watched the Mary Rose sink from near this location.

Built by Henry VIII in 1544, Southsea Castle was one in a series of forts constructed in what was the most ambitious scheme of coastal defence since Roman times.

The castle was built in great haste, prompted by the King's fears of a French attack on Portsmouth. Said to have been planned by the King himself, the castle's design incorporated the latest plans for artillery forts.

On 18 July, 1545, the King's fears were realised. The French fleet approached Portsmouth and landed near the Isle of Wight. Although the English were greatly outnumbered, King Henry's proud warship, the Mary Rose, defended. On the first day of the Battle of the Solent, neither side took much damage. But the next day, and in a sad twist of fate, the Mary Rose capsized and sank as she advanced on the French. It is said that the untrained crew forgot to close the gun ports after the ship had fired, and they filled with water. As Henry VIII looked on from Southsea Castle, all but a few dozen of the Mary Rose crew perished.

The Castle itself has been no stranger to tragedy - in 1627 it was gutted by fire and in 1759 an accidental explosion blew up a large part of the castle. In the early 1800s, Southsea underwent a large renovation to accommodate more guns and include a full garrison during wartime. Then in 1860 its gunpower was augmented substantially when new gun batteries were constructed at either side of the castle, as a result of the Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom.

One hundred years later, the castle was withdrawn from active service and its long and fretful history has given way to countless reports of paranormal phenomena.

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