Inglis Barracks

Inglis Barracks was a military installation in Mill Hill, London.

History
The barracks, which were named after Lieutenant General Sir William Inglis, were built in 1905 as the depot for the Middlesex Regiment. Many men enlisted at the barracks during the early stages of the First World War.

The Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers also moved onto the site in 1943 during the Second World War and the headquarters of the British Forces Post Office was established there in 1963. The barracks ceased to be the home of the Middlesex Regiment when that regiment merged with three other regiments to form the Queen's Regiment at Howe Barracks in Canterbury in 1966. The British Forces Post Office left the site and moved to RAF Northolt in 1988.

A bomb was planted by the Provisional Irish Republican Army killing a soldier and injuring nine others at the barracks in August 1988. A two storey building containing the single men's quarters was completely destroyed.

The Ministry of Defence sold the site for residential development as part of Project MoDEL in 2012.