Le Défi Media Group

Mute reminders
http://www.defimedia.info/articles/2224/1/Mute-reminders/Page1.html
Raghav Ramful

 
By Raghav Ramful
Published on 23rd May, 2008
 
Our colonizers have left us many a solid structure of strategic importance during their reign which in one way or another case shaped the history of Mauritius. Among these are the imposing Martello Towers built along the coast to guard the island against invasion. They stand at the main bays as military response to enemy landings.
 

 
Three of the finest examples of Martello Towers in the world stand majestically along the coasts of the island. One of these towers situated at an exquisite location at La Preneuse in Rivière Noire was restored in 1993. Before its restoration, that was conducted by Friends of the Environment, the tower was just a stonework ripped of by its guts made of teak wood and other accessories. In 1992, grants by the embassies of the United States, France and Britain as well as funds donated by the European Union and the local private sector allowed for the interior woodwork to be replaced. In order to facilitate access to visitors, the door on the ground floor was kept and a staircase was built linking the first floor to the ground le­vel that replaced ladders that had disappeared. The interior stonework was sand-blasted to remove leached lime cement. The joints between the stones on the roof were resealed and the leaky internal drainpipes were replaced. The gun carriage and platform has been rebuilt and the original gun has been replaced on the roof.

Of the 218-odd examples which defended the coasts of the British Empire, from Ca­na­da to Ceylon and South Afri­ca to Ireland and those construc­ted by the Americans against the British, the five towers built in Mauritius were among the last to be constructed.

The military reputation of Martello Towers rests solely on the remarkable performance of a single Tower at Cap Mor­tella, northern Corsica, in February 1794. A British naval force, prepared to capture the island from the French, was forced to withdraw. This led to serious damage and 62 casualties, on account of the single Tower's concerted cannon fire.

Building towers
The Tower eventually surrendered after two days of continual bombardment by a battery of four guns set up by the army under Generals Dundas and Moore. The British naval and military officers were so im­pressed by this heroic de­fence of Corsica by 38 men armed with only one 6-poun­der and two 18-pounder guns, that they had the design copied.

Some 103 Towers, named "Mar­tello", a distortion of the name of the Cape, were later built along the south-east and east English coasts against the threatening Napoléonic invasion. A further 115 or so To­wers were also built by the English between 1796 and 1846 in South Africa, Canada, Ireland, Bermuda, Jamaica, Sri Lanka, Minorca, and in Mauritius. The Americans, in turn, copied the design and built six towers between 1809 and 1873 to serve as defence against the Bri­tish. Similar towers, some of which precede the Martello design, are to be found in Jersey and Guernsey islands.

Martello To­wers were built at the main bays as a military response to de­fending Mauri­tius against ene­my landings. The enemy, the French, might aid the co­lo­nists in their resistance to the conditions surrounding the abo­lition of slavery; the colo­nists owing ancestral allegian­ce to France. It would be extre­mely interesting to know to what extent the Fren­ch actually did consider in­vading the is­land and to what extent the­re­fore the British were justified in building the towers and the citadel. As it transpired, the French did not attempt military activities.

Their compatriots in Mau­ritius successfully negotiated a massive compensa­tion package with the Bri­tish Go­vern­ment on the loss of their slaves who were eventually freed. The Martello Towers were never used in battle but stand as mute reminders of this tur­ning point in Mauritian history.