The Friends of Drakelow Tunnels
Roger Bryan's Virtual Tour
Photos by Roger Bryan, comments by Paul Stokes
Back in 2001 Roger, aided from time to time by the rest
of the team, set about the huge task of photographing the site from one end
to the other. It was very fortunate that he did.
Locked securely away for over 40 years, slowly decaying away, were the remains
of an almost unique U.K. WWII underground factory*. In 2008 the site's owners
set about stripping it out for the scrap iron and steel. By the end of 2008
tunnels 1, 2, & 3 and all their interconnecting galleries had been stripped
bare. Now, where there used to be the remains of a WWII underground factory
are simply a set of empty tunnels that used to house a WWII factory. Thanks
to Roger's foresight we still have a record of what it used to be like. There
are literally hundreds of photos to sort through, scan and build into these
pages, so this will be a long on-going task. The scans do not do justice to
Roger's original prints, but they will offer an insight for those who never
had the opportunity to see it all for real.
It is easier to follow the virtual tour in conjunction with the factory layout
plan on pages 10 and 11 of Drakelow Unearthed (Revised
Edition), or on Pages 8 and 9 of the original version.
Paul
On then to the first installment - Tunnel 1 and its galleries. The 4 main tunnels are parallel and aligned roughly East-West. We start at the Western end of Tunnel 1, where the entrance would have been.
TUNNEL 1
© 2009 J.R.Bryan
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Enter through the doors to tunnel 1 (You can't actually do this as it is bricked up, concreted in and backfilled!) and look behind you towards the outer steel door and wooden airlock door that you would have just come through. |
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Turn around again to face into the tunnel. The time office is on your left and ahead are the second set of wooden airlock doors. |
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To the left is Gallery 1 - Welfare and Overalls. |
Pass through the second airlock doors into the main tunnel and turn back to look at them. |
To the right is Gallery 30 Tropical Packing |
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Turn left to go through Gallery 16 - Fettling Shop Towards Tunnel 2 |
The end of Tunnel 1 |
The metal partition
at the end conceals the housing for a mercury arc rectifier.
Photos of this will be added in the future. The rectifier itself is now on display at Broadfield House Glass Museum Wordsley. |
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* There were only 4 major underground shadow factory schemes in the U.K. along with a few smaller schemes or tunnels at existing factories. The Germans constructed over 200. Of the U.K's schemes, Drakelow was, up until 2008, probably the best preserved. |
© 2009 J.R.Bryan
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Drakelow Unearthed
- Revised Edition
Available in ebook format from Amazon |