
The Subterranea Britannica website is here: https://www.subbrit.org.uk/
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Better late than never - it can be found (PDF) here: https://newsletter.christs-hospital.org ... ldihkuj-n/Ajarn Philip wrote: ↑Sat May 30, 2020 8:48 am However, don't waste your time looking for the CH article on line!
Close to me there is a Cold War underground HQ (not the one that politicians would have used) which is now open to the public. The outward appearance is a cottage with an artificial hill behind iy covering the HQ. They say there is more than 100 feet of earth on top but I don't know how much protection it would have had in any attack.Foureyes wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 4:36 pm Many years ago and in a different existence I was the official keeper of the list of 'holes-in-the-ground.' From that I learnt two things. The first was that there were many more such holes than the public knew about, although most have since been declassified. The second was that there could be many more holes, which were not known about and not recorded.
For example, I was once contacted about a man who had been walking in a wood in Kent, who had stumbled on an overgrown and sealed doorway into a hillside. I checked it out and could find nothing in my records, nor could some others in the same business. To cut a long story short, after a lot of research we established that in 1942/43 someone had the bright idea of constructing an all-singing, all-dancing buried HQ in Kent as an alternative HQ for the commander during the proposed invasion of Europe (D-day). This HQ was duly built and fully kitted-out, all, of course, under the strictest secrecy. In the event, it was not wanted and there were no alternative uses for it, so the place was simply shut down, power and gas disconnected, any files on its existence - still graded Top Secret, of course
If there was, I never learnt about it!!! Each house had its cellars, in 6s we used the first room you came too as the place to clean shoes so we went there every evening. Cases - we didn't have trunks - were stored in the second room. I vaguely remember trying to explore further but can't remember any details so I don't think it was exciting!Foureyes wrote: ↑Fri Oct 02, 2020 1:08 pm Two thoughts cross my mind. If the Cold War had become hot and the UK had been attacked, the staff and pupils of C.H. would have been down in the Tube and among the very few survivors - but only in term-time, of course.
Secondly, was there an equivalent facility at Hertford?