The plan was not to repel the invasion. The plan was to slow it down. A Southern Command memo dated 22 June 1940 set the intention plainly: divide England into small fields surrounded by a hedge of anti-tank obstacles, close the gates behind the German armour, and let the mobile columns round up the cattle. The cattle, in this metaphor, were the Wehrmacht. The hedge was concrete.
General Edmund Ironside had three weeks. By the end of June 1940 the Home Defence Executive was passing plans for thousands of pillboxes and tank-traps along beaches and at nodal points, and work began everywhere at once. Around 28,000 hardened field defences went up between June 1940 and February 1941, when the order came down to stop building. Ironside was already gone by then, replaced in late July by Sir Alan Brooke, who disliked fixed lines and preferred mobile reserves. The pillboxes remained. They had cost too much to demolish.
About a quarter of them are still here.
Roughly 7,000 concrete pillboxes survive across Britain, most of them along the GHQ Line, the 400-kilometre stop-line running from Somerset to the Medway, designed as the last fallback before London and the industrial Midlands fell. In Surrey it follows the Wey from Farnham to Shalford, then the Tillingbourne to Wotton, the Pippbrook to Dorking, the Mole to Horley. The pillboxes sit at roughly 500- metre intervals, sighted to cover the river or the road, often half-buried in undergrowth now. In Essex, between Great Chesterford and Canvey Island, over a hundred FW3 boxes still exist; about forty of them are highly visible from the A130, hexagonal concrete drums sitting in field corners as if they had grown there.
What strikes you about the surviving boxes is how indifferent the landscape has been to their purpose. A Type 22 hexagonal pillbox in a Suffolk field is now a shelter for sheep. A Type 24 on the Stroudwater Canal is a fishing platform. The loopholes have been blocked up with breeze-block, or left open, or filled with empty cider cans. Iron hooks for camouflage netting still poke from the roofs. The Kent Archaeological Society's Victor, surveying a pillbox in Tonbridge, noted with quiet pride that it was bubble-level and vertical, showed no sign of having been dislodged, and was only superficially damaged at the firing apertures. They built them to last a week of bombardment. They are lasting forever.
This is what makes them hauntological in a way that, say, an abandoned Victorian railway viaduct is not. A viaduct is a thing that worked, then stopped working. A pillbox is a thing built for a future that never arrived. The men who poured the concrete in the wet summer of 1940 believed, with reasonable confidence, that German armour would shortly come along that road. Most of those men did not live to know how precisely they had been wrong, and how completely. The boxes are a frozen anticipation, a fortified flinch. The country built itself a defensive crouch and then quietly forgot it was crouching.
There is also the matter of category drift. Henry Wills published his survey Pillboxes: A Study of UK Defences in 1985, and the Pillbox Study Group has been recording sites since the 1990s. In 2003 Historic England (then English Heritage) issued Power of Place, the document that finally reframed the boxes from eyesores to be cleared into part of the historic landscape worth keeping. The bureaucratic sentence had taken sixty years. By then, half of the originally-surveyed boxes had already been lost, mostly to motorway construction, gravel extraction, and the steady incremental tidiness of farmers who wanted their fields back. Listing came late, as listing usually does in Britain.
What the surviving boxes carry, more than military history, is a kind of bureaucratic embarrassment. Nobody quite knew what to do with them in 1946, and nobody quite knew in 1976, and the default position of the British state when it doesn't know what to do is to leave the thing alone and let weather and ivy do the work. This is also how we treat asbestos garages, redundant village telephone exchanges, and the sort of public information films that arrived in primary schools without anyone deciding they should. The pillbox is the same gesture in concrete: an institutional shrug that lasts seventy years.
You can still walk a stop-line. Bring an Ordnance Survey map and the Pillbox Study Group's locations, and follow the Wey or the Stroudwater or the upper Thames. The boxes appear roughly where they should. Some have plaques. Most do not. Sheep wander in and out of them. Children climb on them. The country has metabolised them so completely that the question of what they are for has stopped being asked, which is, I think, the only honest answer it could have arrived at.
Sources:
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GHQ Line — Wikipedia
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British hardened field defences of World War II — Wikipedia
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A Brief Introduction to Military Pillboxes — Historic England
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Conserving 'Powerful Symbol' of Nazi Invasion Threat — Kent History & Archaeology
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Second World War defences in Surrey — Surrey Archaeological Society
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UK WWII Defence Locations — Pillbox Study Group