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Princess Royal Fortress

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Phone
  
+61 8 9841 9369

Princess Royal Fortress

Address
  
Forts Rd, Albany WA 6330, Australia

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5PMMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PMWednesday9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PMSaturday9AM–5PMSunday9AM–5PMSuggest an edit

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National Anzac Centre, Amity, Albany Convict Gaol, King George Sound, Princess Royal Harbour

King george sound ataturk channel from princess royal fortress


Princess Royal Fortress also known as Albany Forts was a fortress on the northern shore of Atatürk entrance on Princess Royal Harbour on Mount Adelaide overlooking King George Sound in Albany, Western Australia. It now operates as a museum.

Contents

American signal lookout at princess royal fortress albany wa


Name

The fortress is named after Princess Royal Harbour, which in turn was named by George Vancouver in 1791 after Princess Charlotte Augusta Matilda. The site occupies an area of approximately 11 acres (4 ha).

Establishment

During the 19th century the loss of the port was deemed a potential threat to the state and the nation. The fortress was built from funds contributed by all states and guns provided by the Imperial British Government. The fortress was the first federal defence project in Australia, without the country yet having a federal government, and opened in 1893. Two gun batteries were dug into the hillside of Mount Adelaide: Fort Princess Royal with two Mark IV 6-inch BL guns and Fort Plantagenant with one six inch gun.

Fires and changes

In 1897 a fire, caused by an incendiary, destroyed the canteen, mess-room and library. The buildings were all weatherboard, with matchwood lining and galvanised metal roofs.

The fortress was staffed by eight officers and five men of the South Australian Permanent Artillery in 1902.

A fire broke out in buildings at the western end of the forts in 1907. The quartermaster sergeant's office, the armament room and the stationary locker were burned to the ground.

In 1909 the Mk VI gun at the Plantagenet battery developed a fault in the barrel, the gun was scrapped and Fort Plantagenet was abandoned. The remaining guns were replaced with emplaced Mk VII guns in 1945, and the old guns were scrapped. From 1893 to 1956 the guns never fired a shot in anger. In 1956, with the advent of the missile era, all coastal defenses were made redundant and closed, including Princess Royal. Many of the military installations were demolished or dismantled. The buildings were alternatively used as school rooms, migrant hostels and then holiday camps, by the 1970s the site was abandoned and succumbed to vandalism.

Restoration

The fortress was extensively restored commencing in 1987 and continued throughout the rest of the 1980s.

Eventually the site became a museum; within the fortress grounds are restored military equipment including shore batteries, armories, barracks, the 10th Light Horse display, trails and a collection of naval guns and torpedoes. Monuments such as the South East Asia Memorial, United States Submariners Memorial and Merchant Navy Memorial are also found on the site. The fortress is visited by over 25,000 tourists annually. Two guns remain in their original positions along with an underground magazine, ruins, several transported buildings, some substantially reconstructed buildings and a parade ground. The Military Institute, Guard House, Barracks and Repository Store are situated around the parade ground, whereas the location of the other buildings depends more on the site topography.

National Anzac Centre

The entire site underwent a major upgrade in preparation for the Anzac centenary commemorations in 2015. The National Anzac Centre was contructed at a cost of A$10.65 million and was opened at the site on 1 November 2014 by the Prime Minister of Australia, Tony Abbott and the Prime Minister of New Zealand, John Key. The date marked the centenary of the first Australian and New Zealand convoy’s departure for war from Albany.

The National Anzac Centre was named the state's best Heritage Tourism Project at the Western Australian Heritage Awards in 2015. The centre received approximately 25,000 visitors in the first three months and over 45,000 during its first six months of operation.

By September 2016 the centre was ranked as Australia's number one museum by TripAdvisor users and had attracted 136,000 visitors since opening.

References

Princess Royal Fortress Wikipedia


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