Geeky thread warning. Or, if you’re like me, a cool bit of 20th Century urban archaeology. Check out this shop in Kingston. What’s unusual about it (aside from its no-doubt-excellent nails service)?
On its gable-end, the wall is double-thickness up to about 6 feet. Why?
On closer inspection, it’s a thick layer of concrete, either up against or cutting through the wall of the presumably brick building. This shop has been armoured...
Even better, this concrete has two wide-angled loopholes in it. The right hand one has been completely filled in, the other left partially open for a handy security box cubby-hole. Armoured and loopholed - this is a fortified shop. A shop with a bunker built-in!
A south-facing, concrete fortification, near a major Thames crossing... This fortified shop is part of London’s WW2 invasion defence network, specifically part of London Stop Line Central (Line B). It was built in 1940 or 1941 to slow German tanks should the worst happen.
It played its small part in history (and thank goodness it was never needed) but I love that it still survives, an otherwise unnoticed chunk of concrete lining an alleyway by a nail bar. You never know what’s around you until you look!
There are *loads* of remnants of Britain’s defences that we never notice - some are destroyed unwittingly every year. There’s a searchable database to find those near you here: archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/…

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More from @wallaceme

Mar 9, 2021
In the name of Dread Cthulhu, who on earth is making stuff like this.
Also, why are the left quotation marks all done with right quotation marks? It's like making the worst meme ever wasn't already bad enough on its own.
Oh wait, that explains everything:
Read 4 tweets
Mar 8, 2021
I would pay actual British money to have seen either this conversation or footage of the sheer bafflement in the Oprah production office when the suggestion arrived.
Sorry, sorry, I keep forgetting that most of the world is blocked. Here it is: Image
Read 4 tweets
Jan 26, 2021
My @theipaper column today is on the UK's decision not to join the centralised EU vaccine scheme. @MattHancock argued last July that "We think we will go faster this way." He was right - and thank goodness for it. inews.co.uk/opinion/uk-bri…
Because it's a UK/EU story, the UK's decision to pursue its own vaccine strategy has been portrayed as primarily about Brexit. It's connected, but that aspect is just a subset of the real question: what's the better approach, conglomerate or competition? inews.co.uk/opinion/uk-bri…
It isn't "vaccine nationalism" to compare performance, to compete to succeed swiftly, and to study what works and what doesn't at home and abroad. It's visibly the best way to save lives and beat Covid. inews.co.uk/opinion/uk-bri…
Read 9 tweets
Jan 11, 2021
Today my new obsession became "front covers of the Romanian Inspectorate of Frontier Police's very own magazine". It's been running for a century so there's a lot of classics to choose from:
I confess I am finding it hard to imagine the UK Border Force doing their own calendar. One for the Home Office to sort out, maybe?
I like the fact that this one they didn't even bother with a headline, just BAM:
Read 4 tweets
Sep 9, 2020
Weirdly I don't remember all these pro-EU tweeters swooning on any of the various occasions when the EU broke the law by breaching the very treaties on which it is founded. Maybe I blinked and missed it?
Don't mention Article 125 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU, which forbids, er, bailouts of member states.
Or, ahem, the fact that Greece unabashedly cooked its books to cover for the fact it didn't qualify under the convergence criteria to join the Euro, which Brussels ignored for political reasons. How did that turn out, btw?
Read 6 tweets
May 15, 2020
This piece by @TomChivers is essential reading on why this might be a sign of lockdown *succeeding* in the community, and why thanks to Simpson's Paradox this trend is "a product of our success, rather than of our failure". unherd.com/2020/05/what-t…
(Not for the first time, things that are true and complicated are harder to explain than those that are incorrect but simple)
Now the government has said R is a key factor in its lockdown alert level, it will need to start talking more about how to handle the fact that R varies - quite a lot - from place to place, and in different settings even in the same place. Which version of R matters, and how?
Read 5 tweets

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