Shrapnel Barracks
The Shrapnel Barracks was a British army base providing living accommodation in Woolwich in southeast London from the mid-19th century until the 1960s. Named after Lieutenant General Henry Shrapnel, it was situated to the northwest of the modern-day Stadium Road, on the western edge of Woolwich Common; the site is now occupied by the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
History
Early history
A "hutted camp" on the site "dating from the Crimea" is recorded and was the base for cavalry units stationed in Woolwich.. The camp was in place before 1869 and is depicted as 'Hut Barracks' on the Ordnance Survey 1st edition map of that date. The Royal Horse Infirmary of the Army Veterinary Department stood immediately to the south, and there were several stable blocks in the vicinity.Duke of York's Cottages
To the north of the barracks rows of huts had been laid out on the common, in lines running north-south, in the early years of the 19th century. They had been erected by married artillerymen to house their own families. A contemporary account talked of "several hundreds" of these "mud huts" of which "the Government grew ashamed and had them replaced". Because they obstructed military use of the common, the garrison commander replaced them with rudimentary single-room dwellings, strung along the edge of the road to Charlton. Their inhabitants were charged rent to defray the cost. Later, additional dwellings were built for married NCOs, and an infant school was added. The area was renamed the "Duke of York's cottages", though they were 'still always popularly called "the Huts"'. After an outbreak of diphtheria, the insanitary and overcrowded dwellings were demolished in the late 1870s. In 1887 the Remount Establishment of the Army Remount Service was built on the site.Later history
In 1896 a new barracks was built and given the name Shrapnel Barracks;. They provided accommodation for a brigade of field artillery. A riding school and 'lines of new stables' were provided on the site. In 1904, the barracks was the scene of a double tragedy in which a soldier shot his girlfriend and then himself.The old Hut Barracks, however, appear to have remained in use. Walter Besant in 1912 describes, from north to south: 'the remount depot, the shrapnel barracks with lines of new stables, the hut barracks, and the Royal Horse Infirmary, with stables beyond'. The 1911 census listed 567 persons 'in the Shrapnel Barracks and Huts'.
In 1910 the barracks were repurposed to serve as No. 1 Cavalry Depot. That year plans were drawn up by Harry Bell Measures for a new officers' mess and quarters, which were under construction the following year. The cavalry depot remained operational through the First World War; after the war the barracks reverted to accommodating a field artillery brigade.
During the Second World War, the barracks served as a mobilisation depot for regiments of artillery. In the early stages of the war, an anti-aircraft battery was built on the common, just east of the barracks, and manned by a battery of the Royal Regiment of Artillery. In 1940 it was armed with four 4.5-inch guns, helping protect areas of southeast London from enemy action; In 1944 it was upgraded to eight gun emplacements, equipped with 3.7-inch guns. On 28 October 1944, a V-2 rocket exploded prematurely above the barracks without causing any casualties.
The barracks was used by the Royal Artillery and the Women's Royal Army Corps before demolition in the 1960s.