The Downs are a
roadstead or area of sea in the southern
North Sea near the
English Channel off the east
Kent coast, between the
North and the
South Foreland in southern
England.
The Downs served in the
age of sail as a permanent base for warships patrolling the
North Sea and a gathering point for refitted or newly-built ships coming out of
Chatham Dockyard, such as
HMS Bellerophon, and formed a safe anchorage during heavy weather, protected on the east by the
Goodwin Sands and on the north and west by the coast. They also lie between the
Strait of Dover and the
Thames Estuary, so both merchant ships awaiting an easterly wind to take them into the English Channel and those going up to
London gathered there, often for quite long periods. In 1639 the
Battle of the Downs took place here, when the Dutch navy destroyed a Spanish fleet which had sought refuge in neutral English waters.
It has depths down to 12
fathoms (22 m). Even during southerly gales some shelter was afforded, though under this condition wrecks were not infrequent. Storms from any direction could also drive ships onto the shore or onto the sands, which — in spite of providing the sheltered water — were constantly shifting, and not always adequately marked.
In the present day, with the
English Channel still the busiest shipping lane in the world, cross-channel ferries and other ships still seek shelter here.
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