Author: Liam Heatherson

By Liam Heatherson

Benfleet Pillbox

Benfleet’s pillbox stands overlooking East Haven Creek – the channel of water separating Canvey Island from the mainland. Built at around 1939/1940, the Second World War pillbox is not in the best condition – decaying and crumbling yet thankfully isolated from any bustling areas. The five sided defence has four loop holes, designed for a Bren…

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By Liam Heatherson

Sudbury Anti-Aircraft Pillbox

First visited by BTP Liam in 2011, revisited 2017. “I went on a day trip to Lavenham, in Sudbury back in 2011, and came across some relevant, although distant, material. On the A130 and A12 motorways, I spotted tons of pillboxes, most being  either standard rectangular or 50p shapes, many identical (along the GHQ line). Despite not being…

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By Liam Heatherson

Allhallows QF Bomb Decoy

The Allhallows decoy was constructed sometime between 1940 and 1941 to defend oil storage facilities nearby on the Isle of Grain. It was one of eleven designated QF controlled fire decoys of P series; or petroleum division. It’s purpose was to simulate burning oil industries to trick the Luftwaffe into thinking the real targets had…

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By Liam Heatherson

Canvey to Hoo Inner Thames Boom

In the Second World War, access to the River Thames was controlled by two defensive ‘booms’. The first at its very mouth ran from Shoeburyness to Sheerness, whilst the second lesser-known but still substantial boom ran from Scars Elbow Battery on Canvey Island to St. Mary’s Bay in Kent. This was a kind of floating…

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By Liam Heatherson

Halstow Decoy Pond

Close to High Halstow on the vast historic marshes on the Kent side of the Thames Estuary lies a peculiar diamond-shaped pool of clear man-made origin. This is a duck shooting decoy pond constructed around the late 17th Century with signs of alteration over the following 200 years. The four channels called ‘pipes’ at either…

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By Liam Heatherson

WW1 Airship Shed

At Moat Farm on the Hoo Peninsula in Kent overlooking the Thames lies an unsuspecting grain store of unusual sloped shape. Believe it or not, this is the roof of an airship (zeppelin) shed dating to the Great War, originally situated at Kingsnorth. The fact this is only the top section; already huge, suggests the…

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By Liam Heatherson

Photography

Photography is of course a key part of what we do at Beyond the Point. Without cameras, we wouldn’t be able to capture images of the historic places we visit so that we can share them with you online and keep a record of these places for the people of the future to marvel at….

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By Liam Heatherson

BTP Finds Cabinet

Welcome to Beyond the Point’s find cabinet – a variety of ancient artefacts from across the Canvey Island mudflats to an Italian cove at the bottom of a castle! Finds give us intriguing insights into what life was like many years ago and has proved the theories of many historians both right and wrong, changing…

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By Liam Heatherson

Photo Editing

Basic Photo Enhancing ‘Editing photographs’. A phrase which to many come to mind as a cheat, or a way of capturing something far more dramatic than what is really there. Yes, this is sometimes the case, as with HDR seen below for example, but heavy editing can be a great way to evoke a certain…

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