© Copyright Richard Webb and licensed for reuse
under
this Creative Commons Licence.
In the early
months of World War II the threat of German invasion was very real and widely
feared, even in the far north of England . The wide expanses of open
beaches seemed ready-made for an amphibious landing by the Nazi hordes – hence
the proliferation of concrete pillboxes on the North-East coast. But, as you
have probably noticed on your inland travels, these gruesome structures are to
be found scattered seemingly liberally almost everywhere.
There was nothing
random about the pillbox network, though. It was remarkably well-planned, with
lines of defence arranged at strategic points across the landscape. One such
‘barrier’ was the Coquet Stop Line, which ran along the course of the River
Coquet from the coast at Amble to a little above Hepple in the upper reaches of
the valley.
The pillbox
illustrated above is that situated a little to the SW of Hepple where the B6341
runs close to the river. It is a typical ‘lozenge-shaped’ affair, and faces
north, with open expanses in front and an easy escape route to the rear. The
line as a whole was designed to slow any German advance from the north towards
the precious strongpoints of Tyneside further south. There was another line,
the Tyne Stop Line, 30
miles to the south, where it was hoped a large field
army could be assembled if sufficient time could be bought.
The pillboxes
were, of course, never needed and are now stubbornly melting into the landscape
some 70 years after their construction. Around twenty of these wartime relics
have been identified as part of the Coquet Stop Line, with a handful having
been lost completely to nature and modern development.
They may not be
pretty to look at but the World War II pillbox is certainly a thought-provoking
feature of our modern-day landscape.
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