Latitude: 50.5539 / 50°33'13"N
Longitude: -2.4247 / 2°25'28"W
OS Eastings: 370009
OS Northings: 72765
OS Grid: SY700727
Mapcode National: GBR PZ.359P
Mapcode Global: FRA 57TL.M66
Plus Code: 9C2VHH3G+G4
Entry Name: Locomotive Sheds
Listing Date: 26 January 2001
Last Amended: 26 February 2018
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1389124
English Heritage Legacy ID: 486718
Also known as: Locomotive Shed
ID on this website: 101389124
Location: Grove, Dorset, DT5
County: Dorset
Civil Parish: Portland
Built-Up Area: Grove
Traditional County: Dorset
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Dorset
Church of England Parish: Portland All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Salisbury
Tagged with: Architectural structure
Mid-C19 locomotive sheds built to serve the Admiralty Incline Railway, transporting stone from the Admiralty Quarries to Portland Harbour for the construction of breakwaters.
Mid-C19 locomotive sheds built to serve the Admiralty Incline Railway, transporting stone from the Admiralty Quarries to Portland Harbour for the construction of breakwaters.
MATERIALS: the sheds are constructed of coursed Portland limestone and have corrugated asbestos roofs.
PLAN: the sheds are aligned roughly north-south and stand to the east of the site of the incline railway, now Incline Road.
EXTERIOR: the building consists of three locomotive sheds, two side by side and one attached at the southern end.
Sheds one and two have segmental arched doorways and windows down each side with flat heads, now boarded up. Both of these sheds have hipped roofs with overhanging eaves. Shed three is an extension of shed two and has a hipped roof at its northern end where it joins shed two. The roof is gabled at its southern end which contains a large door with flat lintel.
INTERIOR: sheds one and two retain timber king post truss roofs, shed three has common rafters with collars. The internal walls are mostly bare stone with some whitewash, and what appears to be a chimney breast surviving in one of the sheds.
The area around Portland Harbour has historically been recognised as an important military strategic location. Portland, conveniently situated equidistant between Portsmouth and Plymouth and facing the French naval dockyard at Cherbourg, was established as the first naval anchorage specifically designed for the navy's fleet of steam-driven warships, and the necessary breakwaters and coaling facilities were an integral part of the scheme. An 1844 survey map of Portland, by surveyor John Taperell, shows the proposed breakwater structures of the scheme designed by the Admiralty's Chief Engineer, James Meadow Rendel. Preliminary works for the breakwaters began in 1847 with the formal construction of the inner breakwater being marked by a ceremony in which HRH Prince Albert laid the foundation stone on 25 July 1849.
The stone needed for the construction of the breakwaters was to come from Portland itself, and in order to facilitate this a prison was established there in 1848. Prisoners would be used to provide labour for the excavation of stone at the adjacent Admiralty Quarries, and a cable-worked incline railway was constructed to transport the stone on wagons from the quarries down the hill to the harbour where the breakwaters were to be constructed.
At the height of production, the railway would be sending up to 3,000 tons of stone to the harbour each day, and eventually an estimated six million tones were used in the construction of the breakwaters. After several years of production, locomotives began to be used for the quarries and this required the construction of the locomotive shed at the top of the incline for housing the locomotives. The initial construction of the breakwaters was completed in 1872 and the use of the incline railway declined, although it remained intact. It returned to operational use in 1894 when two further breakwaters were constructed, being completed in 1906. Following this, the railway was used less frequently but as required, with the locomotive sheds remaining in use to house a locomotive in readiness.
The quarries and the incline railway were eventually closed in the 1930s. Following this, the sheds were used for storage and are now disused.
The Locomotive Sheds at East Weare, dating from the mid-C19, are listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* The buildings are of a pleasing design, with some architectural detailing and use of good quality Portland stone;
* The buildings have a good degree of survival of historic fabric.
Historic interest:
* As a relatively rare survival of a mid-C19 example of this building type, and for their role in contributing to the construction of the defences at Portland.
Group value:
* As part of a complete naval base of considerable importance, specifically designed as the first safe anchorage for the replenishment of the navy's fleet of steam-driven warships;
* The Locomotive Sheds have strong group value with the significant collection of designated assets associated with the military history of the area.
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