Brinken Wood Searchlight Site

IWM H 1291. A typical searchlight.
A typical searchlight setup for illustrative purposes only. These photos are not from the New Forest.
Author: R R

WWII searchlights formed part of a system of aircraft detection linking locator devices, searchlights, and antiaircraft (AA) guns. The locators sent electronic information to the lights and guns, which in turn tracked the target. Once a locator had "locked on" to an enemy aerial target, the concept was for both lights and guns to be trained on the target so it could be nearly simultaneously illuminated and then destroyed. For this to system to work successfully it required a whole network of searchlights and AA batteries across the country. The New Forest was well covered by searchlights and AA batteries, due to the open ground available and the proximity to large urban areas that were on the front line of the conflict for many years between the fall of France and the build-up to D-Day. Even after D-Day both played an important role in defending against V1 flying rockets.

Many of these sites can still be seen as echoes in the New Forest landscape, but just as many have been removed and leave no trace. Work in the war diaries has led us to be able to accurately map their locations and density across the New Forest.
War diaries will often record little more than codes, locations, daily activity, movements and interactions with other units whilst others can be much more descriptive, with daily reports on operations, intelligence summaries and other material. The diaries do not usually contain information about particular people: they are unit diaries, not personal diaries. Many maps and plans were included in the original diaries but some confidential material was removed before the files were made available. This accounts for the absence of some appendices referred to in many of the diaries. You can explore the war diaries through the National Archives.

The War Diary references for this site follow below:

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/3066 – War Diary of 48 S/L Bn, R.E., 1939-41.
Date: 28/4/1940
Site: 526/26
Military grid ref.: U706268
Generator: Lister
Projector: Mk.VI 90cm
Sound Locator: Mk.III
Unit: 455 Coy, 48 S/L Bn, R.E. (takes over from 394 Coy on this date) search light

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/3066 – War Diary of 48 S/L Bn, R.E., 1939-41.
Date: 12/5/1940
Unit: 394 Coy, 48 S/L Bn, R.E., returns from practice camp and relieves 455 Coy.

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/3066 – War Diary of 48 S/L Bn, R.E., 1939-41.
Date: 25/5/1940
Site: Brinken Wood, 526 Area
Military grid ref.: U707269
Unit: 394 Coy, 48 S/L Bn, R.E.

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2262 – War Diary of 35 AA Bde, 1939-40.
Date: 31/5/1940
Site: Brinken Wood, 526/16
Military grid ref.: U707269

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2262 – War Diary of 35 AA Bde, 1939-40.
This site is not listed on returns for 25/6/1940 or 1/8/1940.

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2262 – War Diary of 35 AA Bde, 1939-40.
Date: 29/9/1940 (Same situation on 31/10/1940)
Site: Brinken Wood, 526/1-
Military grid ref.: U707269

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2262 – War Diary of 35 AA Bde, 1939-40.
Date: 31/5/1940
Site: Brinken Wood, TG01/16
Military grid ref.: U707269

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2290 – War Diary of 47 AA Bde, 1941.
Date: 13/9/1941
Site: Brinken Wood, TG01/1-
Military grid ref.: U707269
Unit: 392 Btty, 48 S/L Regt, R.A.

Ref.: TNA:PRO WO 166/2290 – War Diary of 47 AA Bde, 1941.
Date: 1/10/1941
Site: Brinken Wood, TG01/21
Military grid ref.: U707269

equipped as a homing site

Date: 1940
1 comments
  1. Gareth Owen

    I was born in 1943 in Holiday Hill cottage now the reptile centre, my recollection is that the antiaircraft gun was placed at the crossroads of the cottage track and the old ‘roman’ road. There is an old bridge call the roman bridge at this junction. There is also a story of it being strafed at a similar time to nearby Allum Green House being bombed as it was requisitioned by the army.

    The site in your map is more rightly call Warwick Slade and Brinken wood is about 500m south. I have no recollection of a searchlight at that location.
    I remember collection carbon sticks at the old bridge in quite large numbers as a child and taking them home to my parents delight!. These were used, I understand, as the arc light burners for the lights. (Why would they be some 1000ms from the light battery? I also have hazy recollection of a building in the woods there that was identified as the cookhouse. There was a little bartering between this and my parents smallholding.

    Sent in by Mr P Green

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