A Mulberry harbour was a type of temporary harbour developed in World War II to offload cargo on a beach during the Allied invasion of Normandy.
The Mulberry harbours were two prefabricated or artificial military harbours, which were taken across the English Channel from Britain with the invading army and assembled off the coast of Normandy as part of the D-Day invasion of France.
At a meeting following the Dieppe Raid, Hughes-Hallett declared that if a port could not be captured, then one should be taken across the Channel. This was met with derision at the time, but in a subsequent meeting with Churchill, the Prime Minister declared he had surmised a similar scenario using some Danish Islands and sinking old ships for a bridgehead for an invasion in World War I. The concept of Mulberry Harbours began to take shape when Hughes-Hallett moved to be Naval Chief of Staff to the Overlord planners.
A trial of the three eventual competing designs was set up, with tests of deployment including floating the elements, in Solway Firth, Scotland. Hugh Iorys Hughes developed his idea on the Conwy Morfa, using 1000 men to build the trial version. The tests revealed various issues (one design would only take a maximum of a 7 ton truck in the Atlantic swell), which resulted in a final design developed under the management of J. D. Bernal and Brigadier Bruce White, under the orders of Sir Winston Churchill.
The proposed harbours called for many huge caissons of various sorts to build breakwaters and piers and connecting structures to provide the roadways. The caissons were built at a number of locations, mainly existing ship building facilities or large beaches like Conwy Morfa around the British coast. The works were let out to commercial construction firms including Robert McAlpine, Peter Lind & Company & Balfour Beatty who all still operate today. On completion they were towed across the English Channel to the Normandy coast at only 5 mph (8 km/h). The Mulberry Harbours cost more money to build than the Eurostar tunnel.
A complete Mulberry harbour was constructed out of 600,000 tons of concrete between 33 jetties, and had 10 miles (15 km) of floating roadways to land men and vehicles on the beach. Port Winston is commonly upheld as one of the best examples of military engineering. Its remains are still visible today from the beaches at Arromanches, and a section of it remains embedded in the sand in the Thames Estuary, accessible at low tide, about 100 m off the coast of the military base at Shoeburyness.
'Corn cobs' were block ships that crossed the channel either under their own steam or that were towed and then scuttled to create sheltered water at the five landing beaches of 'Sword', 'Juno', 'Gold', 'Omaha', and 'Utah'. Once in position the 'Corn Cobs' became ' Gooseberries '.
The sheltered waters created by the 'Corn Cob' block ships. Two of the 'Gooseberries’ blossomed into 'Mulberries', the artificial harbours.
The Mulberry harbour assembled on Omaha beach at Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer for use the American invasion forces. Mulberry 'A' was so badly damaged by the Channel storms of late June 1944 that it was considered to be irreparable and its further assembly ceased. In American use the Mulberry harbour was thought of as a disposable item and only intended for use for a few weeks..the result of this being in their haste to construct it they failed to securely anchor the completed harbour to the sea bed, which is why Mulberry A was destroyed in the storm and Mulberry B survived.
The Mulberry harbour assembled on Gold beach at Arromanches for use the British and Canadian invasion forces.
'Arrow' the code name for the port at Arromanches and 'Golden' a reference to the Gold beach sector.
The pier heads or landing wharves at which ships were unloaded. Each of these consisted of a pontoon with four legs that rested on the sea bed to anchor the pontoon, yet allowed it to float up and down freely with the tide.
The beaches on which the Allies landed were divided into five sectors with the associated code names 'Sword', 'Juno', 'Gold', 'Omaha', and 'Utah'.
Mulberry-Hafen | Port Mulberry | Mulberry Harbour | Mulberryhaven
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"Mulberry harbour".
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