Although offshore, Flat Holm Island lies within the parish of St. Mary, Cardiff and the community of Butetown, Cardiff. William Crispe and his partner, Benjamin Lund, built a lighthouse (nprn 34261) on the island which is said to have displayed its first coal-fired light in March 1738. In 1820, the lighthouse was taken over by Trinity House. The fog-station was probably established around 1860 by Trinity House. In 1865 The War Office purchased ten acres of land on Flat Holm and the island was under military occupation between 1866 and 1903.
Four batteries were built (nprn 300428), known as the Palmerston Forts. Flat Holm Island houses a Victorian isolation hospital (nprn 31783). The hospital (originally in tented form) was first authorised in 1883 to protect Cardiff from ship-borne cholera; it was later used by other Bristol Channel ports and for isolation of victims of other infectious diseases. The hospital was out of use by 1937. The first radio (wireless) transmission and reception in the world was made between Flat Holm and Penarth (Lavernock) by Marconi on 13 May 1897. Flat Holm was re-occupied by the military during the Second World War and developed as an important and active anti-aircraft installation (nprn 407348). The isolation hospital was converted for wartime service in 1940-44.
Sources include:
Admiralty; 1884, Sailing Directions for the Bristol Channel, 4th Ed, pg124-5
Historic Admiralty Chart 1182-A2, RCAHMW Digital Collections sourced from the UK Hydrographic Office and first published in 1839
RCAHMW, July 2010.
Adnoddau
LawrlwythoMathFfynhonnellDisgrifiadapplication/pdfCAP - Cambrian Archaeological Projects ArchiveElectronic copy of the final report relating to an archaeological watching brief at Flat Holm Island. Carried out by Cambrian Archaeological Projects Ltd: CAP Report No. 430, Project No. 738.