Description
The monument consists of a complex of linear defences, running from Leuchars Airfield in the south to Lundin Bridge in the north-east. It is made up of concrete anti-tank blocks, command posts, quadrant towers, pill boxes and what may have been a bombing decoy post to the north of the airfield.
There were also anti-glider posts on the foreshore, some of which are still visible under certain tidal conditions, and barbed wire entanglements. Set back behind the main line was a camp for those who built and later defended the line.
The defences were intended to protect a stretch of the coastline which was considered particularly vulnerable to attack by German forces in the Second World War. They were constructed in late 1940 by Polish troops.
Stretches of the line of anti-tank blocks have been lost through deliberate removal or through coastal erosion, or are now simply covered over by shifting sands, while at least one quadrant tower has collapsed. The camp for those who built and defended the line has now been reduced to the shells of two buildings and a water tank, though there are traces of other buildings in the surrounding woodland.
The main area to be scheduled is an irregular L-shaped configuration running 6,600 metres from north to south, and 4,000 metres from east to west, as indicated in red on the accompanying map extract. For much of its length the inner boundary of the area is defined by the lines of existing trackways. Excluded from this area is an enclosure around the quadrant tower at NO500248, which is in residential occupation.
A second area to be scheduled is a rectangle centred on NO239480, extending to 590 metres on its north-south axis and 190 metres on its east west axis, as indicated in red on the accompanying map extract.