Saint Paul's Battery
Saint Paul's Battery | |
---|---|
Marsaxlokk, Malta | |
St Paul's Battery | |
Coordinates | 35°50′36″N 14°33′36″E / 35.84333°N 14.56000°E |
Type | Polygonal artillery battery |
Site information | |
Open to the public | No |
Condition | Abandoned |
Site history | |
Built | 1881-1886 |
Built by | British Empire |
In use | 1886-1900 |
Materials | Limestone and Concrete |
St Paul's Battery is an artillery battery in Marsaxlokk, Malta. It stands on high ground at the shoreward end of Delimara Point, above il-Ħofra-z-Zgħira. It is a polygonal fort and was built by the British from 1881 to 1886. It commands a field of fire northwards over St Thomas' Bay and Marsaskala.
Approximately 350 m (1,150 ft) south is Fort Tas-Silġ, a much larger polygonal style fortification.
History
St Paul's Battery was built between 1881 and 1886 by the British to help Fort Tas-Silġ cover the defence of St Thomas Bay. It was armed with three RML 7 inch gun mounted on six-foot platforms. Its gun crew and garrison were stationed at Fort Tas-Silġ.
The battery's guns were removed and it was abandoned 1900 since it had lost its importance as a defensive position.
Present day
The fort remains abandoned to this day and in very poor condition. It is covered with trees and shrubs and its ditch is full of debris, but the gun emplacements, ditch and entrance to its underground magazine are still visible.[1]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to St. Paul's Battery. |
- ↑ "St Paul's Battery". Wikimapia. Retrieved 31 December 2014.