I don’t think this tunnel has been reported on here before, it’s perhaps not as interesting as some of the other disused railway tunnels reported on, but it did play an unusual role in WW2.
The tunnel was part of the Elham Valley railway line, which operated from 1887 to 1947 and connected Folkestone to Canterbury. During WW2 it closed to passengers and was used for military cargo, and a passing loop in the tunnel housed the heaviest of three railway-mounted guns that ran on the line – the gun could take shelter in the tunnel and be rolled out for firing. The recoil from the gun firing its 1,300kg shells would drive the gun back 6m and also distort the track, despite reinforcement.
The tunnel was built as a ‘cut-and-cover’ tunnel – it could have simply been a cutting, but the owner of the nearby Bourne Park House objected to the visual intrusion, hence the 370-metre tunnel.
My partner and I explored the tunnel on a hot day, and were looking forward to some cool air inside the tunnel, but checked out a couple of small buildings in the cutting on the approach to the tunnel first. This one had very little in it:
But the second one had some rusted metal drums and a few books, some partially burned. One was a Readers Digest magazine from 1996!
Because of the curve in the tunnel, no light was visible from the other end at first:
Looking back the other way, it was possible to see light, as there was more sunlight at the end we’d started from:
Not much to report in the tunnel itself, a few alcoves, some graffiti and the remains of a camp fire. But interesting to see a site of some historical wartime significance.
The tunnel was part of the Elham Valley railway line, which operated from 1887 to 1947 and connected Folkestone to Canterbury. During WW2 it closed to passengers and was used for military cargo, and a passing loop in the tunnel housed the heaviest of three railway-mounted guns that ran on the line – the gun could take shelter in the tunnel and be rolled out for firing. The recoil from the gun firing its 1,300kg shells would drive the gun back 6m and also distort the track, despite reinforcement.
The tunnel was built as a ‘cut-and-cover’ tunnel – it could have simply been a cutting, but the owner of the nearby Bourne Park House objected to the visual intrusion, hence the 370-metre tunnel.
My partner and I explored the tunnel on a hot day, and were looking forward to some cool air inside the tunnel, but checked out a couple of small buildings in the cutting on the approach to the tunnel first. This one had very little in it:
But the second one had some rusted metal drums and a few books, some partially burned. One was a Readers Digest magazine from 1996!
Because of the curve in the tunnel, no light was visible from the other end at first:
Looking back the other way, it was possible to see light, as there was more sunlight at the end we’d started from:
Not much to report in the tunnel itself, a few alcoves, some graffiti and the remains of a camp fire. But interesting to see a site of some historical wartime significance.