In 1805, a Gunpowder Works was established alongside Kinterbury Creek for the purpose of restoring damp or damaged gunpowder offloaded from ships. This hazardous process involved unpacking the powder from its barrels, assessing and sieving it, and then "restoving" it (i.e. drying the damp powder in specialized ovens) after which it would be stored in a
magazine once more ready for use. At the time the main magazine lcomplex for Plymouth was at Keyham, but when land there was required for development of the
Dockyard a new location was needed; so in 1852, the
Board of Ordnance opened a new depot alongside the Works at St Budeaux; named Bull Point, it could accommodate up to 40,000 barrels of powder.
RNAD Bull Point closed in 2009 but remains in
MoD ownership; the site includes some 48 listed buildings. In 1860, the
War Department purchased a sizable amount of land in the area due to Prime Minister
Lord Palmerston's fear of the French, then ruled by
Napoleon III. His fear was exaggerated, and the line of military forts encircling Plymouth later became known as "
Palmerston's Follies." However, the upheaval contributed to an increase in the local population and a subsequent change in the area's character. Agaton Fort (see below) was only to the north of St Budeaux and was completed in 1871. In 1890 the first railway station master was commissioned his name was Edmund Tolley. He was a well respected member of the community and well known to the locals. In the 1890s, the parish became a self-contained village with significant development in Lower St Budeaux. Much of the development was incited by General John Trelawney, formerly John Jago, who inherited a great deal of St Budeaux's land from his uncle in 1883. In 1890, the village was already growing due to the construction of the
Royal Albert Bridge and the improvement of area roads, as well as a new
London and South Western Railway station,
St Budeaux Victoria Road. There was also
a Great Western Railway station at Ferry Road. In the following decade, Trelawney built houses and roads and sold to Joseph Stribling the land that would become the Trelawny Hotel in 1895. The hotel included two bars, a bar parlour, a club room, a coach house, outbuildings, stables and yards, and was the first building in St Budeaux to be lit by electricity. Many new shops also opened in the area during the same time period. In 1899, St Budeaux merged with the town of
Devonport, resulting in many improvements to local roads and communications availability. Improvements included the construction of a new railway bridge enabling the Devonport and District Tramway Company to provide efficient service from Devonport, through St Budeaux, to
Saltash Passage, linking Plymouth to Cornwall. ==20th century==