Royal Marine Depot, Deal


The Royal Marine Depot, Deal was a military installation occupied by the Royal Marines and located in South Deal, Kent, on the road to Walmer. The Depot was first established in Deal in 1861, occupying part of the Royal Naval Hospital. In 1868 the Depot expanded and took over the nearby 18th-century Army barracks.
From 1930, Deal served as the headquarters of the Royal Naval School of Music. Renamed the Royal Marines School of Music after the Second World War, it expanded to provide musical training for both junior and senior recruits for all 36 Royal Marines bands.
In 1977 the training Depot closed; the site then became the headquarters of the newly re-formed 41 Commando and was renamed Royal Marines, Deal. In 1988 parts of the site were demolished and sold for housing, leaving only the Royal Marines School of Music, which remained at Deal until 1996 whereupon it relocated to HMNB Portsmouth.

History

What later became the Royal Marine Depot began as a complex of Army barracks: Cavalry Barracks, South Infantry Barracks and North Infantry Barracks, together with a separate Royal Naval Hospital. All had been established in the wake of the French Revolution, alongside what was Britain's nearest Naval station to the coast of France. In the early 1800s both hospitals were, in part, converted to provide additional barracks. The whole site was given over to the Royal Marines in the 1860s.

1793-1869

Cavalry Barracks

The cavalry barracks housed a single troop of 51 cavalrymen on the first floor with their horses stabled below and officers accommodated in the end sections; it was one of a number of similarly-sized cavalry barracks built around the south and east coast at this time. The 15th Light Dragoons were accommodated there from 1792 to 1815 - a convenient base during the Napoleonic Wars.
By 1848 Cavalry Barracks had expanded and accommodated 7 officers, 114 NCOs and privates, and 90 horses.

South Infantry Barracks

South Infantry Barracks were built in line with the cavalry barracks, on the same NE-SW axis, and consisted of three blocks: the central officers' accommodation with clock and cupola, flanked by a pair of soldiers' barrack blocks for the soldiers and NCOs. These four buildings are clearly shown on William Mudge's 1797 map of Deal; still in situ, they are said to form "one of the most complete late 18th century barracks in the country".
Army units occupied the barracks from 1795; but following the end of the Napoleonic Wars their requirements decreased, and in 1816 part of the South barracks was instead used as quarters for 'blockade men', who were drafted against a threat of local smuggling. In 1831 the Coast Blockade for the Suppression of Smuggling was merged into the Coast Guard service; South barracks then became a coastguard station, and this duty continued until 1840. Thereafter, the South Infantry Barracks accommodated various Line Infantry regiments until 1869, when the Royal Marines arrived; in 1848 it is described as having accommodation for 33 officers, 688 NCOs and privates, and 16 horses.

North Infantry Barracks

North Infantry Barracks, which opened in 1797, was originally built as an Army hospital, one of the first military hospitals in the United Kingdom. Its design consisted of three ward blocks connected by an arcaded passage.
Over time, it began to be used as general barracks accommodation and a sizeable parade ground was laid out in front of the main range, flanked by houses for senior officers and others. By 1848 it is described as having accommodation for 27 officers and 418 NCOs and privates, along with a hospital for 120 patients. In 1858, a barracks school and chapel were built on Canada Road.

Royal Naval Hospital

In the 1750s the Royal Navy had built hospitals at Haslar and Stonehouse, close to the key Naval anchorages of Portsmouth Harbour and Plymouth Sound, respectively. Following the start of the French Revolutionary Wars, the decision was taken to establish a similar hospital at Deal, serving The Downs. There was already a hospital in Deal serving the needs of sick and injured Naval personnel and this was purchased by the Navy in 1796. A few years later plans were drawn up for its improvement and expansion: it was to have accommodation for 300 patients in wards arranged across all three floors. Wings extended behind the main frontage at either end; the longer wing to the south contained a laundry and wash house. The apsidal room to the rear of the main entrance was the operating theatre, which also served as a chapel. Separate buildings to the west included a cookhouse, the dispensary, 'rooms for insane patients' and a dead house. The new hospital was completed in 1804; however in 1812 part of the main block had to be rebuilt after the original structure was destroyed by lightning. Later, additional land was purchased and two pairs of large semi-detached houses were built, for the Governor, Physician, Surgeon and Agent of the hospital.
In 1861, the Royal Marine Depot, Deal was established here. Initially staffed by 2 officers, 12 NCOs and 33 privates, it welcomed its first 100 recruits on 10 May that year; by August it was fully operational with 400 recruits in training.

1869-1996

In 1869, the Royal Marine Depot expanded into North Infantry Barracks and South Infantry Barracks, which the Admiralty received in exchange for the Royal Marine Barracks, Woolwich, which were handed over to the War Office following the closure of Woolwich Dockyard. These were then re-named Royal Marine Barracks and Royal Marine Barracks, with the Royal Naval Hospital now referred to as the Royal Marine Hospital Barracks The Cavalry Barracks for the time being remained a separate entity, with a wall delineating its boundary with the South barracks. Later, a new row of buildings was built along the line of the boundary, on what is now Wilkinson Drive, providing an Armoury, recreation rooms and a Sergeants' Mess.
To accommodate the expanding depot, three new barrack blocks were added to RM Barracks, along with a drill hall behind the main block; additional two- and three-storey blocks were also added to the Hospital Barracks site, alongside the old cemetery at the back. RM Barracks also had new buildings added, including a canteen and a gymnasium. In the late 19th century an iron-frame drill shed was added to the original Cavalry Barracks, which now backed on to its own three-sided quadrangle of buildings.
In 1896, a parcel of land was purchased behind South Barracks to serve as a new, larger Drill Field. On what had been the old Drill Field, west of the RM Hospital Barracks, a completely new Hospital was built for the Depot. In 1900 the erstwhile Hospital Barracks was re-named East Barracks, to avoid confusion with the new hospital, with the other areas referred to similarly as North Barracks and South Barracks. In 1905, work was begun on building a new Depot Church on a site alongside the new Drill Field; it was consecrated in January 1907 and dedicated to St Michael and All Angels.
In 1923 the Royal Marine Artillery amalgamated with the RM Light Infantry to form a unified Royal Marines; thenceforward all recruits came to Deal for their basic training. In 1930 the Royal Naval School of Music relocated from Eastney into the East Barracks. During the Second World War, the RN School of Music was evacuated away from Deal and much training activity also moved elsewhere; however, a Non-Commissioned Officers' School was located there, in the East Barracks, from 1940-1946. On 29 October 1940, the Royal Marines Depot was attacked from the air. The Battle of Britain campaign diary records: Army Stations 29 October 1940, Deal: At 1640 hours, three HE bombs were dropped in the barracks, the casualties being 1 Officer and 7 other ranks killed, 6 Officers and 6 other ranks wounded. In 1942, volunteers for the first Royal Marine Commando unit were assembled at Deal, where they undertook initial training and testing.
After the war, Deal continued to be used for initial training of recruits. The Royal Marines School of Music returned to Deal in 1950; at the same time the old Divisional Bands of Portsmouth, Plymouth and Chatham were amalgamated to form the Royal Marines Band Service, which had its headquarters in the East Barracks. Boy Musicians were accommodated in East Barracks, where they also received general schooling; SNCOs and trained musicians lived in North Barracks. During the 1950s most of the old North Barracks buildings were demolished: the row of officers' houses on the south-west side of the parade ground were replaced in 1951 with a new Dining Hall and Naafi, and on the other side of the parade ground a striking new Drill Hall was erected. The original Georgian hospital/barrack blocks were demolished and replaced by a new accommodation block, which was opened in 1956 by HM Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. At the same time the adjacent Victorian barrack blocks were updated. The old chapel and school in Canada Road now served as a Concert Hall and music theory rooms.
In 1977 the Royal Marines Depot, Deal closed as a training base, with all Phase 1 commando training now taking place at Lympstone. The following year, the Physical Training Wing was also relocated to Lympstone. Most of the barracks accommodation was then filled by 41 Commando; but after it was disbanded in 1981 the Royal Marines School of Music was left in sole occupancy.
At approximately 8:20 am on 22 September 1989, a recreation centre in the North Barracks, part of the Royal Marines School of Music, was bombed by the IRA; the three-storey building was flattened, resulting in the deaths of 11 musicians, and injuries to 22 other marines. In 1989 a memorial garden was established, close to the site of the bombing, in the grounds of the former chapel and school. In 1993 a memorial bandstand was erected on Walmer Green. No one has ever been convicted over the deaths.
The depot was largely withdrawn from service in 1991 although the Royal Marines School of Music remained on site in the East barracks until 1996, when it relocated to HMNB Portsmouth.

Redevelopment

The Depot site has largely been redeveloped to provide housing, though a large number of historic buildings remain. South Barracks, which were converted to residential apartments in the early 21st century, are now known as the "Cavalry Barracks"; the East barracks were converted into private housing in 1997 and are now known as "Admiralty Mews". The modern North Barracks buildings were demolished; very little survives of the Georgian barracks here, except along the north-east boundary of the site: buildings flanking the main gate, and a row of houses built to accommodate officers and surgeons; this area is now known as "The Churchills". Infirmary Barracks closed in 1988 and the buildings were demolished to make way for a private housing development now known as "Marine Mews".
In 2003 the former Concert Hall was destroyed in a fire. One wall has been left standing and the adjacent memorial garden has been preserved in place.

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