Local List: FLG 11 building and DCTA Q Block, Former Garrison Artillery Barracks, Colchester (DCC25868)

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Grade Building
Authority Colchester Historic Buildings Forum
Date assigned 12 December 2011
Date last amended

Description

c.1903 FLG 11 plus Q Block is one of 3 buildings, all former wagon sheds. FLG 11 is a single-storey building in English bonded brickwork which has been modified, with new brickwork from approximately cill level on the W side and the full height of the elevation on the E side. Q Block is a two-storey structure in English bonded brickwork which is to the north of FLG 11. It has timber doors opened at ground-level on the E elevation. The window heads are yellow brick and the cills of York stone. The steel roof frames bear onto York pad stones. Based on information from Colchester Garrison: Historic Building Assessment, Ingram Consultancy (Ingram 2000) which considers this to be a building of secondary significance within the Artillery Barracks (Flagstaff/DCTA) group of buildings. [Garrison Buildings Group 1] Ingram: building quality B Ingram: group value B/C -------- Chbf: -------- [In 1866, Colchester became the headquarters of the Army's newly-formed Eastern District, and it was one of the Army's four 'great camps' in Britain (with Aldershot, Shornecliffe, and the Curragh near Dublin). In 1872, the Military Localisation Bill provided the blueprint for the reorganisation of the British Army, with 66 districts for infantry regiments, 12 for artillery and 2 for cavalry (Douet 1998); infantry, artillery and cavalry regiments were stationed at Colchester camp. The brick Cavalry Barracks at Colchester were built in two phases in 1862-4. The brick Artillery Barracks were built next to the Cavalry Barracks in the early 1870s, in the Army's great localisation programme after 1872. The infantry in Colchester were housed in the hutment barracks between Mersea Road and Military Road until 1896, from which date the huts were replaced by brick barracks (1896-1904, Hyderabad and Meeanee Barracks; Douet 1998). The hutted hospital was also closed and the brick Military Hospital opened in 1896. The building programme at Colchester camp of the late 1890s and early 1900s was funded by the Military Loans System established in 1890 by the Barracks Act. £4.1 million was raised, half of which was used to complete the reconstruction in 'permanent materials' of the 'great camps' of Aldershot, Colchester, Shornecliffe and the Curragh near Dublin, and to replace the huts on Woolwich Heath (Douet 1998). The size of the Army was increased in 1897/8 and 1899/1900. By the Military Works Act of 1899, more funding was allocated to the 'great camps' at Colchester and the Curragh near Dublin, and for the building of a new 'great camp' at Tidworth (Douet 1998). In 1899, the government bought some of the land of Barn Hall Farm in Colchester for the Army. Barrack design was improving with the rising standards expected for living accommodation and, during this building programme, barracks were built on a larger scale for corps-level concentrations of troops. In 1900-1901 there was a Commission into barracks accommodation and, in 1901, there was another Military Works Act. In 1904 there were General Reports which were presented to the Army Council and General Staff and, also in 1904, a wholly civilian Barrack Construction Department was formed (Douet 1998). In 1904, the government bought Reed Hall Farm and Bee Hive Farm in Colchester for the Army. In 1906, the Military Loans Programme was cancelled.] References: Douet 1998 VCH 9 In an aerial photo. of 1927, the Flagstaff compound is described as the R.A. Ordnance Depot (National Monuments Record, 'Britain from Above' project) - see image at http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk/image/epw018554 Plan of the garrison in 1949 from CAT Report 97. FLG 11 was demolished in 2015. Q Block was converted to residential, and is now part of Arena Place.

External Links (0)

Sources (2)

  • Historic Building Recording: Ingram Consultancy Ltd. 2000. Colchester Garrison, Colchester. Historic Building Assessment. p.19, FLG 11 and Q Block of DCTA Complex.
  • Photograph: Colchester Historic Buildings Forum. 2011. Digital photograph of FLG 11 building and DCTA Q Block, Former Garrison Artillery Barracks, Colchester. Digital.

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred TL 9979 2461 (15m by 82m)
Map sheet TL92SE
County ESSEX
Non Parish Area COLCHESTER, COLCHESTER, ESSEX

Related Monuments/Buildings (2)

Record last edited

Mar 25 2019 11:11AM

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