![]() | ![]() | An old story has it that during the French invasion of the Island in 1545, when Henry VIII's flagship, the Mary Rose, sank in the Solent without firing a shot, the French landed a watering party at the Chine. Not trusting his men to do the job properly, the galley captain climbed a hill to keep an eye on them. Here he was ambushed by the English and killed, the men having fled. The captain was buried at Bonchurch and his body later taken back to France. As the English were in considerable force at Shanklin at that time, it seems unlikely that the skirmish took place actually in the Chine; it was probably much nearer to Bonchurch. |
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PLUTO (Pipeline under the Ocean) also ran through the Chine and there are still 65 yards of the pipe remaining. PLUTO, one of the great secret successes of the war, was the idea of Lord Mountbatten. During the Normandy invasion in 1944, forked pipelines from the Chine and Sandown carried petrol 65 miles under the Channel to Cherbourg. the first taking only ten hours to lay. The pipelines delivered 56,000 gallons a day until the Allies advanced so far that the line was transferred to Dungeness in Kent. There a million gallons daily were piped to Boulogne and eventually as far as the Rhine. A cross-section of the actual pipe can be seen in the Heritage Centre, together with a short film of the Story of Pluto. The updated Edition of the book by Adrian Searle is available from Shanklin Chine Gift Shop, website and other Island outlets at £7.99 excluding p&p. | ![]() | |