Pembroke Battery

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Pembroke Battery (Maltese: Batterija ta' Pembroke) was an artillery battery in Pembroke, Malta. It was built by the British between 1897 and 1899, and most of it was demolished in the 1980s.

Coordinates35°55′38.2″N 14°29′02.1″E
Built1897–1899
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Pembroke Battery
Batterija ta' Pembroke
Pembroke, Malta
The remains of Pembroke Battery in 2019
Site information
TypeArtillery battery
Location
Coordinates35°55′38.2″N 14°29′02.1″E
Site history
Built1897–1899
Built byBritish Empire
In use1899–1919
MaterialsConcrete
FatePartially demolished in the mid-1980s
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History

By the mid-1890s, the RML armament of the nearby Fort Pembroke had become obsolete, and that fort was turned into an ammunition depot. The British decided that it would be cheaper to construct a new battery rather than upgrade the fort's guns. Pembroke Battery was built between 1897 and 1899, and it formed part of a new series of fortifications meant to house breech-loading (BL) guns.[1]

The battery was oval in shape, and its magazines and other features were located underground. It was surrounded by a ditch and a glacis, which was defended by barbed wire. It was armed with two 9.2 inch Mk X guns, which were mounted en barbette. These were dismantled in 1919 and the battery was struck off the armaments list. The battery remained unused until the 1980s.[2]

Present day

The western gun emplacement and part of the battery's underground complex were demolished in the 1980s during a housing expansion project. All that remains of Pembroke Battery today is a single reinforced concrete semi-circular gun emplacement, and remains of some of the other structures at the rear.[3]

The Pembroke Local Council and the Malta Environment and Planning Authority (MEPA) are currently restoring the remains of the battery to transform it into a museum.[4]

References

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