"Put that Light Out"
In 1941 I was seventeen years old and earning a living as a radio service
engineer in the service department at a local radio shop. There was of course
no television in this area only in the London area but due to the possibility
of German aircraft being able to use the London television transmitters
as navigational beacons the Londoners had no t.v. either! As I wished to
learn more about radio servicing I attended evening classes at the Merchant
Ventures Technical College, in Unity Street until the bombing raids started
and then due to the evening Air raids and unexploded bombs nearby, the classes
were held at week-ends, all Saturday afternoons and all day Sundays. I attended
two classes Saturday afternoons and on Sunday my class was held between
12 noon and 2.0pm, making dinner time a problem, so that was my weekend
routine. Homework from the three classes which I had was often worked on
after my teatime at night until the air raids started and then we were lucky
if we had any lights as the electricity was more often than not cut off
by enemy action.
I lived with my parents at Zetland Road/Cheltenham Road junction in the
flat over the then Midland Bank in Cheltenham Road, my parents being the
caretakers. There was no air raid shelter, so we had to shelter under the
stairs of this four story house!
Of course in those days we had black-out frames which my Father and I made
to be fixed to all the windows before it got dark each day. At the rear
of the house we had a garden the entrance being in Zetland Road and it is
very lucky that none of my family or myself ventured out there when the
air raids were on as the swishing sound we often heard was shrapnel dropping
from bombs and anti aircraft shells. The shrapnel was steel with jagged
edges which were very sharp, each piece being about four inches long by
half an inch in each other dimension.
We always carried our civilian gas mask when out, day and night, but when
I was on duty with the "Fire Watchers" for our part of Cheltenham
Road, I was loaned a steel helmet for the fire watching evening, which helped
protect me from items falling such as shrapnel etc. The "Fire Watchers"
were something like the Neighbourhood Watch of today, in which we could
patrol the area and try and deal with the incendiary bomb fires and hopefully
quickly extinguish them. We also attended lectures on the best way to deal
with an incident, which later, on one occasion came in very useful.
On a Sunday night raid and I think most Blitzes were on Sunday nights, I
was on Fire Watching duty which meant I was out in Cheltenham Road with
a handful of other Fire Watchers. A raid came which looked as if it was
going to be quite a heavy one. We knew this because we saw flares hanging
in the sky, which we called 'Flaming Onions' as they looked like very large
illuminated onion shaped lights. The bombs started to scream down on other
nearby districts of Bristol, so I decided not to lie in the gutter in the
road with the other Firewatchers but to go into a doorway of the local tobacconist
and lie there as there was a canvas blind about 5 foot wide fixed around
the lower part of the shop window. The doorway I decided would protect me
from shrapnel and if the shop's glass window smashed, which I fully expected
it to do, at least the glass should slither down inside this canvas screen
and not on me. This was quite contrary to all the rules but I decided to
give it a go! I am glad I did as the glass did smash when the last of a
string of five bombs whistled down from the area of Redland Green and hit
the ladies well known shop just across the road from me, which at the time
was Morgans, now Maplins. The bomb landed just behind Morgan's public clock
and by me lying in the shop doorway I was able to look by putting my head
under my arm and saw a huge shower of sparks ascend just behind the clock
when the bomb landed. Its an image I shall always remember, it was so vivid
and so near. The other Firewatchers came rushing to me from their positions
in the gutter to see if I was o.k. I found for a few moments I had no voice,
I believe due to the blast, so was unable to assure them all was well. However,
fortunately in a short time my voice returned to normal. I learnt since
that the bomb had hit a girder on the top floor just behind the clock and
detonated immediately instead of going down to ground level, thus doing
less damage and possibly saving the lives of all of us Firewatchers!
Life was interrupted with air raid sirens sounding during the daytime as
well as at night. As far as I can remember all except two such raids were
nuisance raids the aircraft no doubt taking photographs of the City. In
order to protect Bristol from such raids the Balloon Barrage would be operated
and the balloons would ascend all over Bristol usually followed by the air
raid sirens sounding a short time afterwards. On one of these occasions
there was the terrible air raid in daylight on the aircraft works at Filton
on 25th. September 1940. I remember seeing private cars travelling down
Gloucester and Cheltenham Roads with stretchers strapped on to their roofs
carrying the wounded to the City hospitals. In general the daylight raids
were the enemies reconnaissance flights although they would drop the odd
bomb or two in so doing this work before returning to base! On one such
daylight raid a bomb dropped just as a double Decker bus turned into Lewins
Mead and took the full blast killing many on the bus. When these raids were
about to take place the first thing we, the public noticed, was that the
BBC radio programmes would fade repeatedly and become very distorted until
the sirens sounded when the station would close down altogether.
I also remember clearly the raid, which came on Good Friday night in 1941.
After the warning air raid sirens sounded we saw 'Flaming Onions' in the
sky. We guessed we were in for a heavy raid and we were not wrong, it was
to be one of the heaviest. Mum, Dad and myself, had drawn off several jugs
and a bucket of water as per usual before the raid started, so that we would
not be left without anything to drink or wash with if the worse came to
the worse and the water supply stopped. We then went down stairs and as
usual sat under the last flight of stairs. During these raids we would hear
terrific explosions which would be caused by our own Anti-Aircraft guns
firing, the loudest to us being the Ack Ack Battery at Purdown. Most people
I knew called the gun "Purdown Percy" which always shook the windows
violently when it was fired. The noise during a Blitz was terrific. I think
it would have been about half an hour later we heard a loud hissing sound
coming from somewhere up stairs. I thought it must be some escaping mains
house gas supply but Dad said no, it is an incendiary bomb and the house
is on fire. The three of us then rushed up the stairs, all 51 of them taking
the stirrup pump with us. With a bucket of water on the last landing from
the top I fixed up the stirrup pump into the bucket and Dad with the hose
end rushed ahead up the last 18 stairs to the top, closely followed by yours
truly!
The incendiary bomb was burning fiercely away behind the back bedroom's
door causing Dad to open the door on to the burning bomb. My Parents had
a three section screen immediately behind the door to normally stop any
draft as in those days there was no central heating in most homes. This
screen was made of wood and covered with a kind of wallpaper, all of which
was well ablaze. The screen being behind the bedroom door made it very difficult
for Dad to get the hose directed at the fire without twisting awkwardly.
Unfortunately this is what he did and later his Doctor found that he had
twisted the ligaments of his heart possible at that moment, but this could
not be proved of course. From the Firewatching lectures I had attended,
I knew it was dangerous to pour water on to an incendiary bomb as the oxygen
in the water just fuelled the bomb and would make it burn more fiercely
and I am pleased to say that my Dad knew this as well so he concentrated
on extinguishing the flames on the fire screen and surroundings. In the
meantime, acting on what I had learnt at the lectures we were told to drop
the bomb into a bucket of water as with so much water it would extinguish
the bomb. To do this I used a broom handle to poke a hole in the ceiling
under the bomb having first placed a bucket full of water directly underneath.
I am glad to say this action was successful and extinguished the bomb. Dad
carried on extinguishing the fire upstairs with the great help of Mum doing
all the hard work of pumping the water up to him with the stirrup pump.
No mean task as it was much harder work than to pump the water along on
the level.
With all that was going on at the time the Blackout still had to be maintained
and a very keen Air Raid Warden picked up an ornamental sea shell in the
garden and threw it through the only remaining pane of glass in the Bedroom
window shouting "Put that light out"! The light of course was
the light of the incendiary bomb burning as there was no other light on!
We have often laughed about it since.
When the raid finished in the early hours of the morning, possibly 3.30
a.m, or so, we went upstairs to see the damage we had suffered. In my bedroom
I found there were holes in the roof and ceiling large enough for a man
to climb through and my bed had on it a lot of debris, with large broken
lumps of reinforced concrete and bricks cemented together. There was also
a part of the reinforced glass sign with half of a large letter S which
had come from an Air Raid Shelter behind Burton's the then gentleman's outfitters
shop i.e, the first building on the left hand side going up Gloucester Road
from Zetland Rd. At the rear of this building there had been a public Air
raid Shelter which had been hit by a High Explosive bomb killing many people!
This was part of the shelter's sign. My parents bedroom was in a worse state
as they had the damage of the fire as well as the bricks and debris from
the bombing, making both our bedrooms unusable. We had a very kind Manager
who as soon as he heard of the damage invited us to stay at his house in
Redland until our house had been made habitable again. This we were very
pleased to accept.
This concludes the memories which I always think of when the topic of the
Bristol Blitz is mentioned. In June 1942 I was old enough to volunteer for
service in the Royal Air Force and they accepted me in that September ,
but that is another story!
Trevor Dean
Time bomb at Stapleton Road
During the war my family lived at 297,Stapleton Rd. Eastville. During the
Blitz we would use the coal cellar in the house as a safe haven during the
air raids.
The cellar was cold, damp and dirty, but it had an alcove under the chimney
stack which we thought would give us extra protection. As the space was
quite small my mother, brother and myself would usually be the ones to use
the space when things got rough. Our house was semi-detached and our alcove
was similar to one in the attached house.
Our neighbours were two elderly ladies, one of whose husband's had been
a builder at one time. On the side of their house was built a very large and
high covered area in which they kept a rather vicious Alsation dog. One
night during a raid whilst sitting in our alcove, their was an enormous
ground shaking disturbance which almost lifted all three of us off of our
stools. The dog then started barking very aggresively and continued to do
so all night long.
After the all clear sounded we all tried to get some sleep but were awakened
by a policeman banging on our front door. He said to my mother,"You'll
have to get the family out a bit quick missus as ther is a 500lb. time bomb
next door." The bomb had crashed down through the covered area alongside
our neighbour's house and the two old ladies and ouselves were totally oblivious
to the danger. From our estimation, we were just about dead level with the
Lufwaffe's present.
We were just very lucky that German efficiency was not working when they
made the bomb as it was disposed of within a few days and our alcove was
put to good use on many other occassions.
Graham McGuire
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