in 1990 Mulberry was the codename for all the various structures that created the artificial harbours. These were called gooseberries, which metamorphosed into fully fledged harbours. Mulberry "A" and "B" each consisted of a floating outer breakwater called a
bombardons, a static breakwater consisting of "corncobs" and reinforced concrete caissons called
phoenix breakwaters, floating piers or roadways codenamed whales and beetles and pier heads codenamed spuds. These harbours when built were both of a similar size to
Dover harbour. In the planning of
Operation Neptune the term Mulberry "B" was defined as "an artificial harbour to be built in England and towed to the British beaches at Arromanches". The Mulberry harbour assembled on
Omaha Beach at
Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer was for use by the American invasion forces. Mulberry "A" (American) was not as securely anchored to the sea bed as Mulberry "B" had been by the British, resulting in such severe damage during the Channel storm of June 19, 1944 that it was considered to be irreparable and its further assembly ceased, It was commanded by
Augustus Dayton Clark. Mulberry "B" (British) was the harbour assembled on
Gold Beach at Arromanches for use by the British and Canadian invasion forces. The harbour was decommissioned six months after D-Day, when Allied forces could use the recently captured
port of Antwerp to offload troops and supplies. Mulberry "B" was operated by 20 Port Group, Royal Engineers, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel G.C.B. Shaddick.
Breakwaters Corncobs and gooseberries Corncobs were 61 ships that crossed the
English Channel (either under their own steam or towed) and were then
scuttled to act as breakwaters and create sheltered water at the five landing beaches. Once in position the corncobs created the sheltered waters known as gooseberries. The ships used for each beach were: •
Utah Beach (Gooseberry 1, 10 ships): ,
David O. Saylor,
George S. Wasson,
Matt W. Ransom, , , ,
Willis A. Slater,
Victory Sword and
Vitruvius. •
Omaha Beach (Gooseberry 2, 15 ships):
Artemas Ward, ,
Baialoide, ,
Courageous,
Flight-Command,
Galveston,
George W. Childs,
James W. Marshall,
James Iredell Illinoian,
Olambala,
Potter, and
Wilscox. •
Gold Beach (Gooseberry 3, 16 ships):
Alynbank,
Alghios Spyridon,
Elswick Park,
Flowergate,
Giorgios P.,
Ingman,
Innerton,
Lynghaug,
Modlin,
Njegos,
Parkhaven,
Parklaan,
Saltersgate,
Sirehei,
Vinlake and
Winha. •
Juno Beach (Gooseberry 4, 11 ships):
Belgique,
Bendoran, ,
Empire Flamingo,
Empire Moorhen,
Empire Waterhen,
Formigny,
Manchester Spinner,
Mariposa,
Panos and
Vera Radcliffe. •
Sword Beach (Gooseberry 5, 9 ships ):
Becheville, , , , ,
Empire Tamar,
Empire Tana,
Forbin and
HNLMS Sumatra.
Phoenix caissons , and the remains of a third, at
Arromanches, 2010 Phoenixes were reinforced concrete caissons constructed by civil engineering contractors around the coast of Britain, collected and sunk at
Dungeness in Kent and
Pagham Harbour in West Sussex prior to D-Day. There were six different sizes of caisson (with
displacements of approximately 2,000 tons to 6,000 tons each) and each unit was towed to Normandy by two
tugs at around three knots. The caissons were initially planned to be moored along the coast, but due to a lack of mooring capacity they were sunk awaiting D-Day, and then refloated ("resurrected", hence the name). The Royal Engineers were responsible for the task, and questions had arisen about whether their plans were adequate. US Navy Captain (later Rear Admiral)
Edward Ellsberg, a known expert in marine salvage, was brought in to review the plans and determined that they were not. The supplied pumps were designed for moving large volumes of sewage horizontally, and were incapable of providing the necessary lift to pump the water up and out of the caissons. Ellsberg's report resulted in Churchill's intervention, taking the task away from the Royal Engineers and giving it to the Royal Navy. Newly appointed commodore Sinclair McKenzie was put in charge and quickly assembled every salvage barge in the British Isles. The phoenixes, once refloated, were towed across the channel to form the "Mulberry" harbour breakwaters together with the gooseberry block ships. Ellsberg rode one of the concrete caissons to Normandy; once there he helped unsnarl wrecked landing craft and vehicles on the beach.
Bombardons The bombardons were large by plus-shaped floating breakwaters fabricated in steel and rubberized canvas that were anchored outside the main breakwaters that consisted of gooseberries (scuttled ships) and phoenixes (concrete caissons. Twenty-four bombardon units, attached to one another with hemp ropes, created breakwaters. During the storms at the end of June 1944. some broke up and sank while others parted their anchors and drifted down onto the harbours, possibly causing more damage than the storm itself. Their design was the responsibility of the Royal Navy; the Royal Engineers designed the rest of the Mulberry harbour equipment.
Roadways Whales The dock piers were codenamed whales. They were the floating roadways that connected the "spud" pier heads to the land. Designed by
Allan Beckett, the roadways were made from innovative torsionally flexible bridging units that had a span of , mounted on pontoon units of either steel or concrete called "beetles". After the war many of the "Whale" bridge spans from Arromanches were used to repair bombed bridges in France, Belgium and the Netherlands. Such units are still visible as a bridge over the Noireau river in Normandy,
Meuse River in
Vacherauville (
Meuse), as a bridge over the
Moselle River on road D56 between
Cattenom and
Kœnigsmacker (
Moselle) and in
Vierville-sur-Mer (
Calvados) along road D517. In 1954, some whales were also used to build two bridges (still visible) in Cameroon along the Edea to Kribi road. In the 1960s, three whale spans from Arromanches were used at
Ford Dagenham for cars to drive from the assembly line directly onto ships. A span from Mulberry B reused after the war at
Pont-Farcy was saved from destruction in 2008 by
Les Amis du Pont Bailey, a group of English and French volunteers. Seeking a permanent home for it, they gifted it to the Imperial War Museum and it was returned to England in July 2015. After conservation work it is now part of the Land Warfare exhibition at
Imperial War Museum Duxford.
Beetles Beetles were pontoons that supported the Whale piers. War work by the Butterley Company included the production of steel "pontoons used to support the floating bridge between the offshore Mulberry Harbour caissons and the shore on Gold and Omaha beaches after D-Day 1944". Roy Christian wrote: "The workers who made mysterious floats had no idea of their ultimate purpose until one morning in June 1944 they realised that their products were helping to support the Mulberry Harbour off the low coastline of Normandy, and by that time they were busy building pontoon units and Bailey bridge panels ready for the breakthrough into Germany. But if they were often in the dark about the purpose and destination of the products over which they toiled for days in workshop, forge and foundry, they understood their importance. No time was lost through the war years on strikes or disputes, and absenteeism was low. Some of those workers were women, for in the first time in its history female labour was being employed at the Butterley works." 420 concrete pontoons were made by Wates Ltd. at their Barrow in Furness, West India Docks, Marchwood and Beaulieu sites. A further 40 concrete beetles were made by John Laing (for Wates) at their Southsea factory and 20 were made at R. Costain at Erith, Twelve were made by John Mowlem at Russia Dock as were 8 by Melville Dundas and Whiston. They were moored in position using wires attached to "Kite" anchors which were also designed by
Allan Beckett. These anchors had such high holding power that few could be recovered at the end of the war. The Navy was dismissive of Beckett's claims for his anchor's holding ability so Kite anchors were not used for mooring the bombardons. An original Kite anchor is displayed in a private museum at Vierville-sur-Mer while a full size replica forms part of a memorial to Beckett in Arromanches. In October 2018, five Kite anchors were recovered from the bed of the Solent off Woodside Beach, which had been an assembly area for Whale tows prior to D-Day. The anchors were taken to Mary Rose Archaeological Services in Portsmouth for conservation treatment.
Spuds The pier heads or landing wharves at which ships were unloaded were codenamed spuds. Each consisted of a pontoon with four legs that rested on the sea bed to anchor it while it could float up and down freely with the tide. ==Deployment==