Here is a mobile phone photo taken this afternoon showing the remnant two sisters with the coastguard mast off to their left.
The other photo is one taken from France using a telephoto lens by the same German army photographic unit which took the one Scotchie posted above. It shows a gaggle of ME109's flying past the Chain Home radar masts during the Battle of Britain and probably still unaware that these were enabling their every move to be plotted. The four transmitter masts are in the centre and three of the four receiving masts are shown on the right. The latter were wooden masts supporting receiving dipoles.
When this chain of radar stations was erected all around the coast, the cover story was that they were Radio Direction Finding stations for use by merchant ships and they were consequently referred to as RDF until the later term RADAR was adopted. When the Germans belatedly realised that they were radar masts and started bombing and shelling them, the masts proved remarkably resilient to damage as it was very difficult to achieve a direct hit and the blasts from near misses tended to pass harmlessly through the open latticework.