On Sunday 18 June 1944 the congregation assembled for morning service in
the Guards’ Chapel in Wellington Barracks, St James’s Park, central
London. The service started at 11 am. Lord Hay had read the first
lesson, and the ‘Te Deum’ was about to begin, when the noise of a V1 was
heard. The engine cut out. There was a brief silence, ‘an intensive
blue flash’ and an explosion – and the roof collapsed, burying the
congregation in ten feet of rubble.
This was the most deadly V1 attack of the Second World War, and Jan Gore’s painstakingly researched, graphic and moving account of the bombing and the aftermath tells the whole story. In vivid detail she describes the rescue effort which went on, day and night, for two days, and she records the names, circumstances and lives of each of the victims, and explains why they happened to be there.
Her minutely detailed reconstruction of this tragic episode in the V1 campaign against London commemorates the dead and wounded, and it gives us today an absorbing insight into the wartime experience of all those whose lives were affected by it.
Available from:
Pen & Sword
This was the most deadly V1 attack of the Second World War, and Jan Gore’s painstakingly researched, graphic and moving account of the bombing and the aftermath tells the whole story. In vivid detail she describes the rescue effort which went on, day and night, for two days, and she records the names, circumstances and lives of each of the victims, and explains why they happened to be there.
Her minutely detailed reconstruction of this tragic episode in the V1 campaign against London commemorates the dead and wounded, and it gives us today an absorbing insight into the wartime experience of all those whose lives were affected by it.
Available from:
Pen & Sword
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