Sentry box

File:King Tut Presidential Police Dog Sentry Box 1929.jpg in 1929]]

A sentry box is a small shelter with an open front in which a sentry or person on guard duty may stand to be sheltered from the weather. Many boxes are decorated in national colours.

Compare: {{cite book

| year = 1901

| editor1-last = Sturgis

| editor1-first = Russell

| editor1-link = Russell Sturgis

| title = Sturgis' Illustrated Dictionary of Architecture and Building: An Unabridged Reprint of the 1901-2 Edition

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=j9wAW2YleywC

| series = Dover Architecture

| volume = 1

| edition = Unabridged reprint

| publisher = Courier Corporation

| publication-date = 2013

| pages = 343–344

| isbn = 9780486148403

| accessdate = 2015-12-30

| quote = BOX. [...] A small shelter for one or more persons engaged in specific duties; as, in military usage, a small movable wooden hut to afford shelter for a sentry, often somewhat elaborately decorated with the national colours: a sentry box [...].

}}

In literature

The sentry box at the entrance to Buckingham Palace features in the poem of the same name by A. A. Milne in the collection When We Were Very Young and in the illustration by E. H. Shepard which accompanied it.

{{commonscat|Sentry boxes}}

See also

References

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Category:House types

Category:Security guards

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