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Lookout Post |
The Royal
Observer Corp lookout post has been
neglected for some time and if not
maintained will undoubtedly lead to
demolition on the grounds of safety.To
the Northwest of Week St. Mary, on
private land, stands a disused Royal
Observer Corps Post. This has been there
so long that we accept it as part of our
landscape.
This
landmark is set high on a hill and is
clearly visible as we approach the
village from Week Orchard or Treskinnick
Cross. It is usually referred to as the
Lookout Tower or the Observation Post.
Officially, it was designated as N2 of
No. 20 Group, Truro.
When the
Observer Corps first established a Post
at Week St. Mary in 1941, a flimsy
wooden structure was erected. The
present brick tower was built three
years later in 1944.
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The first Cornish post was established
at Veryan in January 1940 and was soon
followed by others. By 1942 there were
36 aircraft recognition and reporting
posts in Cornwall. Across Britain there
were over 1,600 reporting posts and
these were connected by telephone to one
of thirty-five operations rooms. These
in turn, passed on all aircraft
movements to their appropriate RAF
Sector Operations Room. A limited number
of Observation Posts, three of which
were in Cornwall, were equipped with
High Frequency radio equipment. This
communication could be used to contact
air-crew, who were lost or in distress,
and helped to save lives and planes.
Although the Week St. Mary tower has
deteriorated with age, its layout is
still complete. The area was once fenced
off from the public with barbed wire.
Some of the concrete posts are still
in-situ. Its structure is brick built
and of two floors. Sleeping
accommodation was on the ground floor
with a stove for warmth. The hearth and
flue pipe exit, are still clearly
visible. The original external wooden
steps have been missing for many years.
These led to the upper-floor, which
contains a shelter and the observation
platform. Originally linked by
telephone, a rusty hook-up bracket is
still visible at the top of its South
West corner. A more specific feature to
have survived is the chart post. This
reinforced concrete pillar supported the
large brass, plotting chart on the upper
floor of the tower. This was used to
plot the direction of aircraft movement.
Observers were experts at identifying
aircraft and this information used by
the RAF to intercept enemy planes.
At the end of Word War II, Week St. Mary
along with other posts was stood down.
However, only a couple of years later in
1947, it was reactivated. At first its
previous aircraft recognition work was
its primary role, but as weapons became
more sophisticated the Observer Corps’
role gradually changed and along with
this a new type of structure was needed.
This later structure is not so clearly
visible. Despite neglect and some
vandalism, Week St. Mary’s WW II
Observation Post has managed to keep its
aircraft plotting chart post. Even more
unique is that it is a World War II
reporting post that still stands
alongside its later Cold War monitoring
station. Children have recently done
some considerable damage kicking out the
upper parapet wall. Not only are they
putting themselves at risk, but have
damaged an important part of our local
heritage. There is a high probability
that the structure is unsafe and
children should be discouraged from
climbing it.
The Royal Observer Corps Association has
recorded details of both posts in their
work which is now lodged in the Defence
of Britain Project and held by the
Imperial War Museum at Duxford.
After the Royal Observer Corps was
reactivated in 1947 their role was to
gradually change and in 1953 the Week
St. Mary post was re-designated as 132
of the re-numbered No 10 Group Truro.
From 1955 the Corps was given the new
role of detecting and reporting nuclear
attacks on Britain. They were to become
part of the United Kingdom’s Warning and
Monitoring Organisation (UKWMO). The
threat from the Soviet Union had now
become Nuclear and from 1960,
observation posts and operations rooms
were placed underground. By 1963
aircraft-reporting had virtually
disappeared and from 1964 the role of
the ROC was entirely Nuclear detection.
In June 1960 Week St. Mary’s observation
tower was discontinued. A new
below-ground post or nuclear bunker was
constructed only a few yards to one side
of the original observation post.
Nuclear monitoring and training was
carried out at Week St. Mary and
continued until October 1968 when a
restructuring programme reduced the
number of ROC posts to 875 and
operational rooms to 25. It was at this
time that the Week St. Mary’s branch of
the Observer Corps was stood down. The
site was closed down and the bunker
abandoned.
The bunker is constructed to give almost
total protection against nuclear
fallout. It is built out of concrete
twelve inches thick and six feet below
ground level. Access to the bunker is
gained through a counterbalanced steel
trap door. A steel ladder services a
vertical shaft two feet square and
fifteen feet deep. To prevent the
ingress of water, the concrete vault is
tanked on the outside with a bitumastic
layer. Even so, a vertical pipe and hand
pump was fitted to cope with any
flooding that might occur. The bunker
was equipped with radiological equipment
to observe nuclear bursts and to monitor
radioactive fallout. The fifteen feet by
seven and a half feet bunker was also
designed as a survival unit so that
three observers could live for up to
three weeks below ground. Ventilator
shafts provided an air supply and
batteries supplied the electrical power.
There is little to see of this Bunker
from above ground level. Its main
structure still ‘appears’ sound. The
limited amount of equipment that had
been left behind has rotted in the damp
atmosphere. Unfortunately some finer
details of the ventilation grills have
suffered from unnecessary vandalism. By
the late eighties communism became less
of a threat and the Soviet block started
to collapse. The last of the Observation
Corps posts finally stood down in
September 1991.
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A good view of the tower can be seen
from the road and is more clearly
visible from the lane. This is, however,
on private land and it is hoped that
those reading this article will respect
this. We thank Bob Booker for his
communications with the ROC Association
and Lawrence Holmes (Truro Branch ROC)
for providing the information from which
this article was taken.
If anybody has old photographs of the
tower, or information regarding those
who manned either of the two observation
posts, or any information at all, please
contact us.
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