BLOCKHOUSE, in fortification, a small roofed work serv ing as a fortified post for a small garrison. The word, common since I Soo, is of uncertain origin, and was applied to what is now called a fort d'arret, a detached fort blocking the access to a land ing, channel, pass, bridge or defile. The modern blockhouse is a building, sometimes of two storeys, which is loopholed on all sides. Blockhouses are built of wood, brick, stone, corrugated iron or any material available. During the South African War (1899-1902) they were often sent from England to the front in ready-made sections. Their use played an important part, in con junction with "sweeping" operations by mobile columns, in the final subjugation of the Boers.