Ryton, Searchlight Battery TT142

Ryton, Searchlight Battery TT142

HER Number
5530
District
Gateshead
Site Name
Ryton, Searchlight Battery TT142
Place
Ryton
Map Sheet
NZ16NE
Class
Defence
Site Type: Broad
Anti Aircraft Defence Site
Site Type: Specific
Searchlight Battery
General Period
20TH CENTURY
Specific Period
Second World War 1939 to 1945
Form of Evidence
Demolished Building
Description
Searchlight Battery - accomodation hut still stands. During WW2 many of the Tyneside searchlights were manned by the 225th Anti Aircraft Artillery (Searchlight Batallion) USA. Their headquarters was at Debdon Gardens in Newcastle (HER 5559). Many of the searchlight sites were used as low security POW camps after the American troops left, accomodating the prisoners who were working on local farms. Until radar was invented, searchlights were the only means by which aimed anti-aircraft fire and fighter interception were possible at night. The searchlights forced the enemy aircraft to fly higher, thus reducing their bombing accuracy. They also guided disabled allied aircraft back to base. During WW1 searchlights were emplaced to defend London and other vulnerable points. In 1916 a searchlight belt was established 25 miles inland from Sussex to Northumberland. In WW2 almost the whole country was covered in a grid of searchlights. A searchlight site would comprise of a circular earthwork around 9.14 metres in diameter for a 90cm light, a predictor emplacement, at least one light anti aircraft machine gun pit and a number of huts for the detachment and generator. These sites only generally survive as crop marks, unless the huts or foundations survive {"20th Century Defences in Briatin, An Introductory Guide", 1995, Handbook of The Defence of Briatin Project}.
Easting
415000
Northing
565000
Grid Reference
NZ415000565000
Sources
<< HER 5530 >> 2003, Searchlight Sites on Tyneside - 18 November 1944, www.skylighters.org
Alan Rudd, 1986, List of 20th century defence sites on Tyneside
Council For British Archaeology, 1995, Twentieth Century, Defences in Britain - An Introductory Guide Handbook of The Defence of Britain Project, p 62-63