2016

TF8509 : Applegate Barn

taken 8 years ago, near to Sporle, Norfolk, England

This is 1 of 5 images, with title Applegate Barn in this square
Applegate Barn
Applegate Barn
Only twelve of these unusually shaped buildings with their steep sloping roofs have been recorded in Norfolk.
East Anglian Real Property Company farm sheds

Only twelve (perhaps thirteen) of these unusually shaped buildings have been recorded in Norfolk.
There are two each in

Sporle (Breckland) > Link - Link
Buckenham (Broadland) > Link - Link
Cantley (Broadland) > Link - Link and
Guestwick (Broadland) > Link - Link

and one each at

Beighton (Broadland) > Link
Halvergate (Broadland) > Link
Reedham (Broadland) > Link
Paston (North Norfolk) > Link
and in Southrepps (North Norfolk) - location has as yet to be found


Built in 1936 or 1937 by the Dutch-owned East Anglian Real Property Company, a Dutch farming consortium which started business in 1929, on land that is said to have been occupied or owned by Dutch farmers at the time, it has been suggested by the York-based English Heritage military specialist Roger Thomas, who also claims to have uncovered a Nazi plot to capture King George VI, that the barns were built by a 5th column of Nazi agents on the sites of secret improvised airfields intended to be used by German aircraft for landing Hitler's troops on farms close to the royal family’s Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, this despite the fact that the two barns nearest to Sandringham are located 24 kilometres (15 miles) away and that all others are dotted about North and South Norfolk, ie the other end of the county.

When in 1940 the Royal Air Force had been surveying the UK for suitable sites for their extensive program of airfield expansion, the engineers noticed the unusual buildings and suspected that they might be intended to be used as aircraft hangars, disguised as Dutch barns, all the more so since nearby hedges and drainage ditches had been removed. The buildings, although they do not look anything like Dutch barns, which are open-sided and have a semi-cylindrical corrugated iron roof, were referred to as such because they had been built by a Dutch company. Subsequently, arrests were made and the sites dug up and obstructed so as to prevent the creation of landing grounds. The arrested farmers, all of them said to have been Dutch nationals, were however found to be entirely innocent and hence soon set free again.

A record of these events is apparently kept at the National Archives but confirmation of the buildings having been constructed in order to serve a purpose other than farming has so far eluded historians other than Roger Thomas. Considering the fact that it would be a huge struggle if not to say impossible trying to fit an aircraft through doors barely wide enough for a modern tractor to pass through, the existence in Norfolk of a nest of (Dutch) enemy spies secretly working for the Third Reich is perhaps best relegated to the rumour mill and the various other fantasies it contains, German parachutists dressed as nuns being only one.

The East Anglian Real Property Company is documented to have been one of the pioneers of sugar beet production in East Anglia. Dr Susanna Wade-Martins, Honorary Research Fellow at the School of History and Professor Tom Williamson, both from the University of East Anglia, describe the buildings, which were referred to as "red barns" - because the corrugated asbestos sheeting at the gable ends was originally painted red - as having been constructed for the purpose of storing sugar beet.


Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved]   © Copyright Evelyn Simak and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Geographical Context: Farm, Fishery, Market Gardening
This photo is linked from: Automatic Clusters: · Applegate Barn [7] Title Clusters: · Applegate Barn [5] ·
1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
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1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
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Grid Square
TF8509, 52 images   (more nearby 🔍)
Photographer
Evelyn Simak   (more nearby)
Date Taken
Saturday, 2 April, 2016   (more nearby)
Submitted
Saturday, 2 April, 2016
Subject Location
OSGB36: geotagged! TF 8538 0915 [10m precision]
WGS84: 52:38.9039N 0:44.3320E
Camera Location
OSGB36: geotagged! TF 8541 0914
View Direction
West-northwest (about 292 degrees)
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Image classification(about): Supplemental image
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