Buckler's Hard, originally called Montagu Town, was built by the
second Duke of Montagu, and was intended to be a free port for trade with the
West Indies. Its geography also favoured the development of shipbuilding, as the hamlet possessed access to a sheltered but navigable waterway with gravel banks capable of supporting slipways for vessel construction and launch. Timber for hulls was also readily available from the surrounding
New Forest.
Shipbuilding Shipbuilding at Buckler's Hard commenced in the early eighteenth century. A private shipyard adjoining the hamlet was established by James Wyatt, a local entrepreneur and timber merchant from Hythe on Southampton Water. Wyatt & Co. won a contract to build the Navy ship in 1744, and subsequently another, , at Buckler's Hard.
Henry Adams, a master shipwright, was sent from
Deptford Dockyard to Buckler's Hard in 1744 by the Admiralty to oversee the building of these ships by Wyatt & Co. After the completion of the initial ships by Wyatt, Buckler's Hard grew to national prominence under Henry Adams and won subsequent Royal Navy contracts. Over the following sixty years, Adams would supervise the building of 43 Royal Navy ships at Buckler's Hard, including three that fought at the
Battle of Trafalgar in 1805: , , and . Shipbuilding at Buckler's Hard declined in the nineteenth century.
20th century to present During
World War II, the village was used to build
motor torpedo boats, and the river was a base for hundreds of
landing craft for the Normandy invasion,
Operation Overlord. Buckler's Hard was where
Sir Francis Chichester began and finished his solo voyage around the world in the
Gipsy Moth IV. ==Economy==