1. Christmas Tree, The Rum Story, Whitehaven |
Monday, 17 December 2018
Monday, 15 October 2018
The Whitehaven Aircrash of 14 October 1943
1. Avro Anson Mk I Aircrash (14 October 1943) Rededicated memorial bench at the crash site Arrowthwaite Woods, Kells, Whitehaven [75 years after five airmen died here] |
2. Dedication inscription to the 5 airmen who died "Always in our hearts and minds" |
3. Personal tributes to the five airmen who died Thursday 14 October 1943 (c. 4.30 pm) |
4. Personal tribute from an eye witness 75 years of Remembrance |
5. View to the south from the aircrash site (October 2018 - 75 years after the crash) =================================== 75 Years of Remembrance (14 October 1943 - 14 October 2018) |
Sergeant (Pilot) Vincent James DUNNIGAN, RCAF, aged 26
Sergeant (Wireless Op./Air Gunner) Thomas INMAN, RAFVR, aged 20
Sergeant (Navigator) Cyril JOHNSON, RAFVR, aged 33
Sergeant (Navigator) Rene Harold MURPHY, RCAF, aged 20
Flying Officer (Pilot) Henry Joseph O'GARA, RAFVR, aged 29
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For additional information click on 'Comments' below'.
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Monday, 27 August 2018
Elmers End Bus Garage Memorial
1. London Transport Museum Covent Garden, London The Elmers End memorial can be found here |
2. Elmers End Bus station memorial Information board at the museum |
3. Elmers End memorial display 'London Transport at war' section London Transport Museum |
4. Elmers End Bus Station memorial (detail) Records the names of 10 staff killed_________________________ |
V1 bombing of Elmers End, Beckenham, London
Ten years later, in 1954, a memorial tablet was dedicated at Elmers End bus station commemorating the 10 staff members who died. A second tablet was unveiled at the main entrance gate to the station which was named after one of the engineering staff, John Cunningham, who had sounded the alarm bell warning of the approaching V1 before he was killed.
When Elmers End bus station was closed in 1986 the memorials were moved. The 'Cunningham Gate' memorial was moved to the another London Transport garage at Norwood, also south London. Initially the main bus station war memorial was taken to the London Transport Museum at Acton. It has subsequently been cleaned up and incorporated into a section of the museum's 'London Transport at War' section at Covent Garden, London, as can be seen in the above photographs.
For additional information click on 'Comments' below.
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Wednesday, 15 August 2018
Learning the truth of Marine Robert Casson on D-Day
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2. Robert Casson's niece Mary Holland A pilgrimage to Normandy and the beaches April 2018 |
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3. Robert's niece Mary Holland and her husband John Remembering two of Mary's uncles: Robert Casson, died 6 June 1944 Joseph Casson, died 27 June 1944 Normandy Veterans Memorial, Whitehaven (June 2018) |
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4. Robert Casson's wartime medalas and certificate Issued to his family by the M.O.D. in April 2018 |
5. WW2 memorial at Rowntrees factory, York Mary Holland points to her Uncle Robert's name Robert Casson worked at Rowntrees before the war _________________________________________ |
Royal Marine Robert Casson, EX/3236, originally from Whitehaven was killed at sea while landing on Juno Beach on the first day of the Normandy Landings, D-Day 6 June 1944. He is buried at Ryes (Bazenville) War Cemetery, Calvados, Normandy next to his younger brother Joseph who also died in the Normandy campaign.
In 2018 Robert's family obtained his wartime service records and his medal entitlement. For the first time Robert's relatives were able to learn the truth of what happened on D-Day. It also turned out that the Commonwealth War Graves Commission had incorrectly recorded Robert as serving with 45 Royal Marine Commando. In reality, his Robert's records show he was serving with 46 Royal Marine Commando (attached 4th Special Service Brigade H.Q.). The Commission has since corrected their information about Robert.
Most of this new research about Robert Casson was done by his niece, Mary Holland and her husband John.
Click on 'Comments' below to read John and Mary's summary of Robert Casson.
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Wednesday, 18 April 2018
Understanding Auschwitz and the Holocaust
"Shoah"
"The biblical word Shoah (which has been used to mean 'destruction' since the Middle Ages) became the standard Hebrew term for the murder of European Jewry as early as the early 1940s." (Yad Vashem - the World Holocaust Resource Centre)
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1. "Auschwitz: Understanding the Past, Facing the Future" by Gordon Cockburn (b.1944) [2018 touring exhibition at The Beacon Museum] |
2. "Shoah". Oil on canvass by Gordon Cockburn [2018 touring exhibition, The Beacon Museum] |
3. "Shoah - Destruction No 2" . Oil on board, by Gordon Cockburn [2018 touring exhibition, The Beacon Museum] |
4. "Ladies of Auschwitz: The Survivors" Oil on canvass board, by Gordon Cockburn [2018 touring exhibition, The Beacon Museum] |
5. "Head Studies: From Sanity to Insanity" Pastel on paper, by Gordon Cockburn 2018 touring exhibition, The Beacon Museum] + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + |
(Photographs of the artwork taken with permission)
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"Auschwitz: Understanding the Past, Facing the Future"
This exhibition was a series of paintings, drawings and pastels about the WW2 by the Scottish artist Gordon Cockburn (b. 1944) at The Beacon Museum, Whitehaven, Cumbria in 2018. Some of the artwork by Gordon Cockburn in the exhibition can be seen in the above images. The artist's interpretation of the horrors of those who were incarcerated at Auschwitz during the Second World War help the present day generations to understand the past and face the future.
For further information, click on 'Comments' below.
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Thursday, 8 March 2018
"Until the day break ..."
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2 .High Street, Cleator Moor Cumberland (Early 20th C postcard) Birthplace and home of Sgt W.F. Birkett, REME |
3. Cleator Moor Brass at a remembrance service Cleator Moor Wesleyan (Methodist) Church Billie Birkett was married in this church |
4. Cleator Moor War Memorial Decorated with poppies of Remembrance Billie Birkett died in WW2, his father Dick in WW1 |
5. 1914 Lonsdale Battalion recruitment poster Dick Birkett, father of Billie, was a recruit Dick Birkett was killed in action in 1917 [Photo taken at Cumbria Museum of Military Life, Carlisle] |
"Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved, and be thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bether."
The Bible (King James Version)
[The first part of this verse is the epitaph on Billie Birkett's CWGC headstone in the war cemetery at Becklingen, Germany]
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Introduction
Staff Serjeant William Fisher Birkett, REME (known as 'Billie') [Photograph No. 1] "... died of injuries sustained in a battle accident in a forward area on the Western Front ..." on 18 April 1945. Sgt. Birkett came from Cleator Moor, Cumberland in the N.W. of England [Photograph No. 2]. In life, Billie was a popular member of the Wesleyan (Methodist) church at Cleator Moor, a church which holds an annual service of Remembrance for all those killed in wars [Photograph No. 3].
The death of Sgt. Birkett in WW2 was a case of history repeating itself. His father, Pte. Dickinson Fisher Birkett ('Dick'), was killed on the Western Front while serving with the 11th (Lonsdale) Battalion of the Border Regiment in the 1914 - 1918 war. Like father, like son - both made the ultimate sacrifice while serving in the Armed Forces. Billie Birkett and his father Dick Birkett are just of the war dead from the Cleator Moor district of Cumbria commemorated by the town's war memorial [seen in Photograph No. 4].
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Wednesday, 21 February 2018
Medals for Mary ... after more than 70 years!
1. (Left) W/152141 L/Cpl. Mary Hanson, ATS Wearing the ATS 'duck cap'(altered for style) (Right): Mary wears her WW2 medals Finally received in February 2018 |
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2. Mary receives her WW2 medals and thanks The 1939-45 War Medal and Defence Medal [February 2018] |
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3. Mary Hanson (right) celebrates with her family Afternoon tea at the Midland Hotel, Morecambe [Photograph: John Holland] |
4. Mary Hanson in the years before enrolment (Left): 'May Queen' at school in Batley (1932/33) (Right): As a fashion model for Novello's (c. 1939) |
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5. Overton-on-Dee, on the Welsh-English border Mary was posted here to the RAOC (1942-1945) |
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6. Mary Hanson with her army colleagues With the RAOC at Overton-on-Dee (Mary is in the middle row looking down) |
7. Mary Hanson with her MOD Veterans Badge
(Awarded June 2018)
At last - appropriate recognition for a wartime veteran
In February 2018, ATS Lance Corporal Mary Hanson finally received her WW2 service medals and written thanks for her service - more than 70 years after the end of the war. Between 1942 and 1946 Mary served in the A.T.S. (Auxiliary Territorial Service), the women's branch of the British Army. A few weeks later, and in time for the 2018 Armed Forces Day and Mary's 97th birthday, she also received her M.O.D. Veterans Badge. Appropriate recognition for Mary's fine contribution to the war effort during WW2.
To read more about Mary's story click on 'Comments' below.
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