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Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath

 

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Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath



 
 
The Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath, (RNCF), was set up at Holton Heath, Dorset
Dorset

Dorset , is a Counties of England in South West England on the English Channel coast. The county town is Dorchester, Dorset, situated in the south of the county at ....
 in World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 to manufacture Cordite
Cordite

Cordite is a family of smokeless powder developed and produced in the United Kingdom from 1889 to replace gunpowder as a military propellant....
 for the Royal Navy
Royal Navy

The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom is the oldest of the British Armed Forces . From the mid-18th century until well into the 20th century, it was the most powerful navy in the world, playing a key part in establishing the British Empire as the dominant world power from 1815 until the early 1940s....
. It was reactivated in World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 to manufacture gun propellant
Propellant

A propellant is a material that is used to move an object. This will often involve a chemical reaction. It may be a gas, liquid, Plasma , or, before the chemical reaction, a solid....
s for the Admiralty
Admiralty

The Admiralty was formerly the authority in the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy. Originally exercised by a single person, the office of Lord High Admiral was from the 18th century onward almost invariably put "in commission", and was exercised by a Board of Admiralty....
 and its output was supplemented by the Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent
Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent

The Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent, Monmouthshire, UK, was dedicated to the manufacture of explosives or the storage of ammunition from 1939 to 1993....
. After the end of World War II, the explosive manufacturing areas of the site were closed down and some areas of the site reopened as an Admiralty Research Establishment.






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The Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath, (RNCF), was set up at Holton Heath, Dorset
Dorset

Dorset , is a Counties of England in South West England on the English Channel coast. The county town is Dorchester, Dorset, situated in the south of the county at ....
 in World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 to manufacture Cordite
Cordite

Cordite is a family of smokeless powder developed and produced in the United Kingdom from 1889 to replace gunpowder as a military propellant....
 for the Royal Navy
Royal Navy

The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom is the oldest of the British Armed Forces . From the mid-18th century until well into the 20th century, it was the most powerful navy in the world, playing a key part in establishing the British Empire as the dominant world power from 1815 until the early 1940s....
. It was reactivated in World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 to manufacture gun propellant
Propellant

A propellant is a material that is used to move an object. This will often involve a chemical reaction. It may be a gas, liquid, Plasma , or, before the chemical reaction, a solid....
s for the Admiralty
Admiralty

The Admiralty was formerly the authority in the United Kingdom responsible for the command of the Royal Navy. Originally exercised by a single person, the office of Lord High Admiral was from the 18th century onward almost invariably put "in commission", and was exercised by a Board of Admiralty....
 and its output was supplemented by the Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent
Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent

The Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent, Monmouthshire, UK, was dedicated to the manufacture of explosives or the storage of ammunition from 1939 to 1993....
. After the end of World War II, the explosive manufacturing areas of the site were closed down and some areas of the site reopened as an Admiralty Research Establishment. A major part of the explosives site became a Nature Reserve
National Nature Reserves in England

National Nature Reserves in England are managed by Natural England and are key places for wildlife and natural features in England. They were established to protect the most important areas of habitat and of geological formations....
  in 1981. Other parts of the site were converted into an Industrial Estate; and some may be used for housing.

The Admiralty Research Establishment became part of Defence Research Agency
Defence Research Agency

The Defence Research Agency , was an executive agency of the Ministry of Defence from April 1991 until April 1995. At the time the DRA was United Kingdom's largest science and technology organisation....
 (DRA) and DRA Holton Heath finally closed in the late 1990s. None of the site is now owned by the Ministry of Defence
Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom)

The Ministry of Defence is the Departments of the United Kingdom Government responsible for implementation of government defence policy and is the headquarters of the British Armed Forces....
.

The site

A site was needed because Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, Order of the Garter, Order of Merit, Order of the Companions of Honour, Territorial Decoration, Fellow of the Royal Society, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, Queen's Privy Council for Canada was a Politics of the United Kingdom known chiefly for his leadership of the United King...
, the First Lord of the Admiralty, insisted that the Royal Navy had their own independent supply of Cordite. The Army was to be supplied with Cordite from the HM Factory, Gretna
HM Factory, Gretna

His Majesty's Factory, Gretna, or H.M. Factory, Gretna as it was usually known, was a United Kingdom government World War I Cordite factory, adjacent to the Solway Firth, near Gretna, Dumfries and Galloway....
, at Gretna, Scotland, another remote location. Holton Heath was chosen in 1914 because of its remote location, away from centres of population, and its good transportation links. It was adjacent to the London and South Western Railway
London and South Western Railway

The London and South Western Railway was a railway company in England from 1838 to 1922. Its network extended from London to Plymouth via Salisbury and Exeter, with branches to Ilfracombe and Padstow and via Southampton to Bournemouth and Weymouth, Dorset....
, it was on a backwater of Poole Harbour
Poole Harbour

Poole Harbour is a large natural harbour in Dorset, southern England, with the town of Poole on its shores. The harbour is a drowned valley formed at the end of the last ice age and is the estuary of several rivers, the largest being the River Frome, Dorset....
 and it was adjacent to the Wareham
Wareham, Dorset

Wareham is a historic market town and, under the name Wareham Town, a civil parish, in the England county of Dorset. The town is situated on the River Frome, Dorset eight miles south west of Poole....
 to Poole
Poole

Poole is a large coastal town and seaport in Dorset on the south coast of England. The town is east of Dorchester, Dorset, and Bournemouth adjoins Poole to the east....
 road, the A351 road.

During construction and during World War I, it was guarded by a detachment of armed Metropolitan Police
Metropolitan Police Service

The Metropolitan Police Service is the territorial police force responsible for law enforcement within Greater London, excluding the City of London which is the responsibility of a City of London Police....
. After World War I, the site was guarded by the Royal Marine Police; and later the Ministry of Defence Police
Ministry of Defence Police

The Ministry of Defence Police is a civilian police force that is part of the Ministry of Defence . The force is part of the Ministry of Defence Police and Guarding Agency which was formed by the merger of the MDP and Ministry of Defence Guard Service on April 1st, 2004....
. There were several scares and false alarms during construction, i.e. claims that various builder's and contractor's English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 or Irish
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
 employees were German
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 spies or saboteur
Saboteur

Saboteur is someone who commits sabotage.Saboteur may also refer to:*Saboteur , a card game by Frederic Moyersoen*Saboteur , directed by Alfred Hitchcock...
s. All these claims had to be investigated. In 1935, during the Re-armament Period
Re-armament

In British history, Re-armament refers to the period between 1934 and 1939, when a substantial programme of re-arming the nation was undertaken to meet the threat posed by Hitler's Nazi Germany....
, a new nitroglycerin
Nitroglycerin

Nitroglycerin , also known as nitroglycerine, , trinitroglycerin, trinitroglycerine, 1,2,3-trinitroxypropane and glyceryl trinitrate, is a heavy, colorless, oily, explosive liquid obtained by nitration glycerol....
 plant was bought from Cologne
Cologne

Cologne is Germany's fourth-largest city , and is the largest city both in the German Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia and within the Rhine-Ruhr, one of the major European metropolitan areas with more than ten million inhabitants....
, Germany, and installed by German technicians. It was necessary for the police to guard them, as they may otherwise have been attacked due to resentment about the rise in power of Nazi Germany and memories of World War I . The main site was bounded by the A351, Station Road and the London and South Western Railway. Holton Heath railway station
Holton Heath railway station

Holton Heath railway station serves the area of Holton Heath in Dorset. It is located adjacent to the former Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath, ; the station was opened in World War I to serve the RNCF....
 was opened to serve the RNCF. The RNCF was linked to the railway by a siding which entered the site just west of the station. A few administration buildings were built on the other side of Station Road. A coal-fired water pumping house was also built away from the main site, at Corfe Mullen
Corfe Mullen

Corfe Mullen is a village in Dorset, England, on the north-western urban fringe of the South East Dorset conurbation and is part of the rural district of East Dorset....
, to pump water from the River Stour
River Stour, Dorset

The River Stour is a 60.5 mile long river which flows through Wiltshire and Dorset in southern England, and drains into the English Channel. It is sometimes called the Dorset Stour to distinguish it from rivers of the same name....
. It was linked to a 3.5 million gallon reservoir inside the RNCF by a 16 inch
Inch

An inch is the name of a Units of measurement of length in a number of different systems, including Imperial units, and United States customary units....
 water main. The pumping house was supplied with coal from its own railway siding from the Somerset and Dorset Railway, which passed nearby.

A jetty, Rockley Jetty, was also constructed in Poole Harbour
Poole Harbour

Poole Harbour is a large natural harbour in Dorset, southern England, with the town of Poole on its shores. The harbour is a drowned valley formed at the end of the last ice age and is the estuary of several rivers, the largest being the River Frome, Dorset....
 just outside the main site. It was used to transport Cordite by boat to Priddy's Hard
Priddy's Hard

Priddy's Hard is an area of Gosport, in Hampshire, England now being developed for housing with part of the site retained as a museum. However, for some two hundred years it was a restricted-access site; first becoming a Fortification and then an Weapons depot for Royal Navy and British Army weapons, explosives and other stores....
, in Gosport
Gosport

Gosport is a town and Non-metropolitan district in Hampshire with around 79,000 resident inhabitants , with a further 5-10,000 during the summer months, situated on the south coast of England....
 . The jetty was linked into the factory's railway system using standard gauge
Standard gauge

The standard gauge is a widely-used rail gauge. Approximately 60% of the world's existing railway lines are built to this gauge . The distance between the inside edges of the rails of standard gauge track is ....
 track. This private track ran parallel to the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) for some distance. It crossed over the top of the LSWR means of a bridge
Bridge

A bridge is a structure built to span a gorge, valley, road, Rail tracks, river, body of water, or any other physical obstacle, for the purpose of providing passage over the obstacle....
.

World War I

To be added.

Chaim Weizmann and Acetone

Production of Cordite required large volumes of the solvent Acetone
Acetone

Acetone is the organic compound with the chemical formula OC2. This colorless, mobile, flammable liquid is the simplest example of the ketones....
 and this was in short supply. At the time, acetone was manufactured by destructive distillation
Destructive distillation

Destructive distillation is the process of pyrolysis conducted in a distillation apparatus to allow the volatile products to be collected. The process led to the discovery of many chemical compounds before such compounds could be prepared synthetically....
 of wood
Wood

Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
. Chaim Weizmann
Chaim Weizmann

Chaim Azriel Weizmann, , was a Zionism leader, President of the World Zionist Organization, and the first President of the State of Israel. He was Israeli presidential election, 1949 on 1 February 1949, and served until his death in 1952....
 had developed a process of bacterial fermentation
Fermentation (biochemistry)

Fermentation is the process of deriving energy from the Redox of organic compounds, such as carbohydrates, using an Endogeny electron acceptor, which is usually an organic compound....
, using Clostridium acetobutylicum
Clostridium acetobutylicum

'Clostridium acetobutylicum', included in the genus Clostridium, is a commercially valuable bacterium. It is sometimes called the "'Weizmann Organism'", after Chaim Weizmann, who in 1916 helped discover how C....
, in 1912 but it did not appear to have any commercial value.

Chaim Weizmann was introduced to David Lloyd George
David Lloyd George

David Lloyd George, 1st Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor Order of Merit , Privy Council of the United Kingdom was a United Kingdom statesman and the only Wales Prime Minister of the United Kingdom - he is also the only one to have spoken English language as a second language, Welsh language having been his first....
, Minister of Munitions
Minister of Munitions

File:David Lloyd George.jpgThe Minister of Munitions was a British government position created during the World War I to oversee and co-ordinate the production and distribution of munitions for the war effort....
, and Winston Churchill in 1915 and was given facilities to develop the process. He used a laboratory at the Lister Institute in London and industrial plant at Nicholson's Gin
Gin

Gin is a distilled beverage flavoured with juniper berries. Distilled gin is made by redistilling neutral grain spirit and raw cane sugar which has been flavoured with juniper berries....
 Distillery
Distillation

Distillation is a method of separation process mixtures based on differences in their Volatility in a boiling liquid mixture. Distillation is a unit operation, or a physical separation process, and not a chemical reaction....
 in Bow
Bow, London

Bow is an area of East London, England, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is a built-up, mostly residential district located east of Charing Cross, and is a part of the East End of London....
 to perfect it.

A full scale acetone plant was set up at the RNCF using bacterial fermentation of Grain
Cereal

Cereals, or cereal grains, are mostly Poaceae cultivated for their edible brans or fruit seeds . Cereal grains are grown in greater quantities and provide more energy worldwide than any other type of crop; they are therefore staple foods....
. By 1917 there was a shortage of grain so Horse Chestnuts
Common Horse-chestnut

Aesculus hippocastanum is a large deciduous tree, commonly known as Horse-chestnut or Conker tree. It is native to a small area in the mountains of the Balkans in southeast Europe, in small areas in northern Greece, Albania, the Republic of Macedonia, Serbia, and Bulgaria ....
 were used as an alternative source of starch
Starch

File:Amylose2.svgFile:Amylopektin Sessel.svgStarch or amylum is a polysaccharide carbohydrate consisting of a large number of glucose units joined together by glycosidic bonds....
. Local school children were asked by the Ministry of Munitions to collect Horse Chestnuts; and six huge storage Storage silo
Storage silo

A silo is a structure for storing Bulk material handling. Silos are used in agriculture to store cereal or fermented feed known as silage. Silos are more commonly used for bulk storage of grain, coal, cement, carbon black, wood chips, food products and sawdust....
s were built to store the Horse Chestnuts. A larger bacterial fermentation plant was also set up in Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 as they had more Maize
Maize

Maize , known as corn in some countries, is a cereal domesticated in Mesoamerica and subsequently spread throughout the American continents....
 than the United Kingdom. After the end of World War I the bacterial fermentation plant was demolished but the silos were kept. In World War II the basements of RNCF silos were converted to Air-raid shelter
Air-raid shelter

Air raid shelters are structures for the protection of the civil population as well as military personnel against enemy attacks from the air. They are similar to bunkers in many regards, though they are not designed to defend against ground attack ....
s; the silos being filled with earth to provide protection. They survived beyond the closure of the Holton Heath site (see below).

World War II

Note: The Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath, like the Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent, were never part of the Ministry of Supply / Royal Ordnance Factory
Royal Ordnance Factory

Royal Ordnance Factories was the collective name of the United Kingdom government's munitions factories in and after World War II. Until privatisation in 1987 they were the responsibility of the Ministry of Supply and later the Ministry of Defence ....
 management chain; they were controlled by the Admiralty. However, they were functionally very similar to the Explosive ROF
Explosive ROF

An Explosive ROF was a United Kingdom Government-owned Royal Ordnance Factory , which specialised in manufacturing explosives during and after World War II....
s.

Post-war use

After the end of World War II, propellant manufacture ceased at Holton Heath, although Caerwent continued to produce Cordite.

The camp was also used as the fictitious 'Sandford Army Camp' in the UK television series 'Bad Lads Army
Bad Lads Army

Bad Lads Army is a United Kingdom reality TV programme, specifically of the kind that constitutes a historically derived social experiment - other examples being The 1900 House and The Frontier House....
 Extreme' in 2006.

To be expanded.

Secrecy of the installation


The site is located at the centre of this above and to the right of Holton Heath station
Holton Heath railway station

Holton Heath railway station serves the area of Holton Heath in Dorset. It is located adjacent to the former Royal Navy Cordite Factory, Holton Heath, ; the station was opened in World War I to serve the RNCF....
, which was opened during the First World War to allow staff to reach the works. There is however no trace of the works, which occupied the space between the railway and the main road, on the map.

External links

  • Link to map of site as it currently exits


Bibliography

  • Bowditch, M.R. and Hayward, L (1996). A Pictorial Record of the Royal Naval Cordite Factory, Holton Heath. Wareham: Finial Publishing. ISBN 1-900467-01-1
  • Pomeroy, Colin A., (1995). Military Dorset Today: Second World War scenes and settings that can still be seen 50 years on. Peterborough: Silver Link Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-85794-077-6
  • Sutton, Michael, (2002). Moulder of molecules: maker of a Nation, Chemistry in Britain, 38, Pp 34 - 36. (December 2002).