Great Siege Tunnels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypeTunnel
Opento
thepublic
Partially open
Great Siege Tunnels
Upper Galleries
Part of Fortifications of Gibraltar
Northern end of the Rock of Gibraltar
Great Siege Tunnels in the Rock of Gibraltar.
Site information
TypeTunnel
OwnerGovernment of Gibraltar
Controlled byGibraltar Tourist Board
Open to
the public
Partially open
Location
Great Siege Tunnels is located in Gibraltar
Great Siege Tunnels
Great Siege Tunnels
Location of the Great Siege Tunnels on the Rock of Gibraltar.
Coordinates36°08′43″N 5°20′42″W / 36.145153°N 5.345047°W / 36.145153; -5.345047
Site history
Builtc. 1780
Built bySoldier Artificer Company
MaterialsLimestone
Battles/warsGreat Siege of Gibraltar
Guns look to the north defending The Rock from an attack by land

The Great Siege Tunnels in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar, also known as the Upper Galleries, are a series of tunnels inside the northern end of the Rock of Gibraltar. They were dug out from the solid limestone by the British during the Great Siege of Gibraltar of the late 18th century.

The Great Siege of Gibraltar was an attempt by France and Spain to capture Gibraltar from Great Britain during the American Revolutionary War. Lasting from July 1779 to February 1783, it was the fourteenth and final siege of Gibraltar. During the siege, British and Spanish forces faced each other across an approximately 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) wide stretch of the marshy open ground that forms the isthmus immediately to the north of the Rock of Gibraltar. The British lines blocked access to the city and the western side of the Rock, while the eastern side of the Rock was inaccessible because of its steep terrain.[1] Gun batteries were placed in a series of galleries on the north face of the Rock, providing overlapping fields of fire so that infantry attacks would come under heavy fire throughout their advance.[2]

The impetus for the construction of the tunnels came from the garrison's need to cover a blind angle on the north-east side of the Rock. The only solution found to cover that angle was via a gun mounted on a spur of rock known as The Notch. There was no possibility of building a path there due to the vertical cliff face, so Sergeant-Major Henry Ince of the Military Artificers suggested digging a tunnel to reach it. His plan was approved and construction work began on 25 May 1782.[3]

Construction and design

Later history of the tunnels

References

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