Private Welsh island with 19th century fort goes on the market

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Facebook Tweet Email Link London — If you want to get away from it all, there can be few places more secluded than Thorne Island. Situated 3 nautical miles off the coast of Pembrokeshire in west Wales, United Kingdom, the private island is home to a 19th century fort. Extending to approximately 2.49 acres, Thorne Island has recently gone up for sale, with the owner seeking offers in excess of £3 million ($4 million), according to the listing on the Strutt & Parker website. The fort’s highlights include a helipad, a covered rooftop bar with a games room and a sea-view office. Originally designed to house 100 men, the restored property can today sleep up to 20 people in its five plush bedrooms, while other living spaces include grand dining rooms and terraces sheltered by barrack-style walls. The fort was built on the craggy outpost between 1852 and 1854 as part of a wider plan to strengthen national defenses against a possible Napoleonic invasion, according to the property listing. But over time the Welsh island’s military role faded and the fort has served as a hotel and family home since the island was first sold in 1932. Its current owner, British tech entrepreneur Mike Conner, bought the island in 2017 for £500,000 ($670,000) after seeing a video about it on YouTube, he told CNN. Back then, the fort – protected by law due to what’s known as a Grade II listing – had no windows or utilities and was waterlogged, but Conner said he was fascinated and seized the opportunity to undertake a once-in-a-lifetime restoration. Conner said he had “underestimated a lot of things,” including the effort involved in installing flushing toilets. “There was a lot of stuff that needed to be done to make it happen,” he said, including digging trenches through rocks and installing a running water system. It took his team 350 helicopter trips over two days to transport materials – from topsoil and building materials to heat pumps for central heating and hot water – to the island. Meanw...

First seen: 2025-08-09 13:34

Last seen: 2025-08-09 14:34