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Brockenhurst Rifle Range

 
Click here to see an 18th century map of the area
Brockenhurst Rifle Range - looking back from Five Thorns Hill along the line of the first range
 
Brockenhurst Rifle Range - looking back from Five Thorns Hill along the line of the first range
 
Brockenhurst Rifle Range was located to the west of the village centre, and ran from close to North and South Weirs, to terminate on, and later near, Five Thorns Hill - follow the Streetmap link above, and page to the west for a view of the area.

The Rifle Range shown on the 1870, 1st edition, 6" to the mile, Ordnance Survey map was set-up following the nationwide establishment of Rifle Volunteer Corps

On this map, a 750 yard Rifle Range (Volunteers) is shown, running from a target, butt and flagstaff on Five Thorns Hill, in an east-north-east direction, eventually alongside The Weir. The presence of a Mantelet – a bulletproof shelter or screen - is also marked.

Today, no evidence has been found of the butt, although a narrow, quite wet, channel runs up the hillside on the approximate line of the rifle range, terminating towards the top – maybe the butt and targets were positioned at the channel’s end.

Brockenhurst Rifle Range, as shown on the 1870 Ordnance Survey map
 
Brockenhurst Rifle Range, as shown on the 1870 Ordnance Survey map
 

On the 1898 2nd edition of the map, the butt is marked as disused, and nothing else is shown; whilst on the 1910 3rd edition, a nearby new 1,000 yard rifle range has appeared on a broadly east-west alignment, with butts and targets located to the north of The Weir. Local geography – boggy ground and hillocks - presumably prevented the original line from being extended to reflect the greater firepower of later weaponry.

(Presumably, the perceived late-1850s/1860s threat from the French receded, and the first range fell into disuse; whilst international uncertainties that eventually led to the First World War (1914-1918) led to the creation of the second Rifle Range).

Today, evidence of concrete foundations can be found amongst the gorse on a small hillock on the approximate site of the later butt, whilst an adjacent small pit may have supplied the material from which the butt was constructed.

At some time after 1921, Beaulieu rifle range apparently moved onto this or a nearby site, which was again used as a Rifle Range during the Second World War.

 

Reference:
Before We Go, Brockenhurst Memories of Peace and War: compiled by Richard Taylor

 

 

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