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Sunday, 31 January 2021

Loughborough Zeppelin Attack Anniversary

The story of the Zeppelin raid on Loughborough, which took place on the night of 31st January 1916, and took the town and its inhabitants by surprise, is well-documented, both on this site (1) and elsewhere. The fate of the Captain of L20 was also covered in a post on this blog in February last year, written by Zeppelin raid expert, Ian Castle. But what of some of the people who were injured in the raid, but survived, and what further news came to light after the raid?     

Joseph Walter Page, whose wife and two children had been killed on Empress Road when the Zeppelin bomb descended onto the street, took out a lawsuit against the Crown in November 1929, following a petition to George V the previous year. He was seeking compensation of £6,868 for the loss of his family and his family home. He had initially received the sum of £19 in compensation, and in 1918 had claimed £1,500, but this had never been paid to him.

In January 1931, Mr Albert Edward Bowler, organist and choirmaster at Wood Gate Baptist church for 28 years, had the following memory of the 1916 Zeppelin attack on Loughborough. At the time of the Zeppelin raid, he had a shop on Empress Road selling ‘smallware’, i.e., items of haberdashery, like braid, or tape, and he was witness to the accidental death of Mr Josiah Gilbert, and Mrs Page and her two children, as well as receiving a number of wounds himself.

Miss Mary Elizabeth Askew was injured by a Zeppelin bomb when she was returning home from Caldwell’s hosiery factory on Church Gate, with some others of the workers. Her friend, Miss Ethel Higgs was killed, but two other workers, Miss Woodcock, and Miss Weston, escaped with lesser injuries than Miss Askew herself for her leg was shattered in the incident and she was thereafter unable to work and earn enough money to look after her widowed mother and her disabled sister. In mid-1917, Miss Mary Elizabeth Askew married Gerald Lovatt. In 1932 She received £69 compensation from a government fund of about £40,000,000 (2).

In the biography of Arthur Edward Shepherd, he suggests that at some point a further Zeppelin bomb was found in the canal, quite some time after the event of 31st January 1916. A comprehensive search of the local newspapers hasn’t thrown up anything, however, in January 1936, a live Zeppelin bomb was found in a nearby village. 20 years after the dropping of the bombs, a champion hedge-cutter by the name of Mr Grewcock - who had actually won 89 hedge-cutting contests – along with his fellow hedge-cutter, Mr Ison, both from Market Bosworth, were employed by Mr Burrows, who owned Cropston House Farm, to trim some hedges in a field called The Dumples (3), on Mr Burrows’ farm.

Using heavy hedge-cutting knives to do the work, the two men then cleared up the debris and made a fire. It was while they were watching the fire burn well that they spotted a long metal object lying under the remaining hedge, which they recognised as a German bomb. They carefully picked it up and carried it away from the source of the fire. It was clearly an unexploded bomb, and Mr Grewcock was of the opinion that it was one that had fallen into the canal at Loughborough during the Zeppelin raid of 1916.

So, the bomb was found in Cropston, and the two hedge-cutters handed it over to David Thomas, the police constable for Newton Linford, who took it away carefully. It was eventually taken to the Leicestershire police headquarters, and perhaps ended up at the Glen Parva depot of the Leicestershire Regiment, where I presume it was defused.

January 1941 was the 25th anniversary of the falling of the Zeppelin bombs on Loughborough, and a reporter wrote in the Leicester Chronicle of 8 February 1841 on how the event was initially reported in the newspapers and how reports changed over time. So, for example, initially, there was no mention made of any location for the attacks, more specific than The Midlands, but within a day or two reports were beginning to include the work ‘Leicestershire’. On the third day, reports were using the phrase ‘The Great Raid’, a phrase which continued to be used until reports of the event began to tail off – which took about a week.

On 31st January 2016, the centenary of the Zeppelin raid was commemorated through a number of events taking place in the town, which included a guided walk from the Carillon, to Orchard Street, where the first bomb fell in the yard of what was then the pub called the Crown and Cushion; to The Rushes, where the second bomb landed; and down to Empress Road, where the third bomb fell on a field close to Thomas Street, and the final bomb landed close to the Herbert Morris factory. This was followed in the evening by the unveiling of a new memorial plaque on The Rushes at the bottom of the stairs that leads up to The Rushes shopping area.   


The granite cross in the middle of the road called The Rushes



The plaque close to the Herbert Morris factory on Empress Road.

Taking part in the guided walk on the morning of 31st January 2016


The memorial plaque on The Rushes, unveiled on 31st January 2016


(1) A guided walk, a Commemorative Walk 2016, other Commemorative Events 2016, The Story of Josiah Gilbert Part 1 and Part 2WW1 and the Zeppelin Raids

(2) The report is difficult to read, but it is probably £40,000,000 given that another report had suggested the total compensation likely to be paid out could reach £44,000,000. 

(3) The Dumples is an ancient path in Anstey that leads from The Martin High School on Links Road, to Cropston.

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 31 January 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough Zeppelin attack anniversary. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/loughborough-zeppelin-attack-anniversary.html  [Accessed 31 January 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne                  

So Who Was Josiah Gilbert Pt 2

Anniversary

As we learned in part 1 of the story of Josiah Gilbert, he was a corner shopkeeper. 

The area close to Empress Road had grown up from about 1888 when Queen Street was developed and named in honour of Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee which was in 1887. It is possible that Empress Road itself was built to celebrate Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897, and named Empress Road as Queen Victoria had been Empress for 20 years, since 1877. Of the houses that remain, the earliest seem to date from 1900 and these are in fact nos.73, 75 and the corner shop at no.77.

The 1911 census return lists no inhabitants of no.75, but living in no.73 are the 12 members of the Hanford family, all employed in the hosiery and elastic webbing industry. 

The corner shop is being run by married couple, Fred and Clara Spencer: Clara is the grocer and general dealer, and Fred, the grocer's assistant. Given that Josiah Gilbert and wife Sarah were both working at their shop on Main Street, Markfield on the 1911 census return, it is reasonable to suppose that they continued to do so when taking on the corner shop on Empress Road, and probable that son, William Josiah Handley Gilbert was also helping in the shop. 

The corner shop would have been a vital part of the neighbourhood around Empress Road, and the everyday essentials that they sold to the locals, who would have popped in most days, would have been very affordable. Many of the goods on sale would not have been pre-packaged, so there was a lot of weighing out - of things like tea, sugar, butter, dried fruit and rice - and packing to do. If the shop sold tobacco, this would have come in a hard rope-like coil that would need to be cut to size; salt would have come in bars, and would need to be sawn to the required size; and soap came in half-yard lengths! 

The shop might also have sold meat, as well as homemade jams, bread, and tartlets, cooked on the premises. It's also quite possible that the corner shop sold patented medicines, as well as other, unregulated medicines. 

When Josiah Gilbert took over the corner shop in 1914, it was a boom time for such premises as his, but this would soon come to an abrupt halt as the First World War took hold. Britain was heavily reliant on imported foodstuffs, and these supplies suffered, such that by 1917, starvation was a distinct possibility amongst the population. As the war progressed, so the corner shop shelved emptied and what the shopkeeper did have for sale became more and more expensive. 

However ...

Today is the anniversary of a tragic event in Loughborough. Here is the second part of the Story of Josiah Gilbert.

Tune in again at 9pm today for other, related stories

You can find the first part of the story here.



Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 31 January 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). So Who Was Josiah Gilbert Pt 2. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/so-who-was-josiah-gilbert-pt-2.html [Accessed 31 January 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne              

So Who Was Josiah Gilbert Pt 1

Anniversary


Today is the anniversary of a tragic event in Loughborough. Here is the first part of the Story of Josiah Gilbert.

Tune in again at 8pm today for part 2.

And at 9pm today for other, related stories.




Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 31 January 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). So Who Was Josiah Gilbert Pt 1. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/so-who-was-josiah-gilbert-pt-1.html [Accessed 31 January 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne         

Friday, 22 January 2021

Loughborough market and fair

Loughborough market from above
Loughborough market


In this blog post I was going to write about the history of Loughborough market and fair, but during my research for information, I came across a lovely little book (1), a sort of guide to some of the market towns of England, that I just found so appealing I had to share with you before looking into the history of Loughborough market - and fair.



The book in question is basically an introduction to English market towns, and it’s rather like a guidebook. How wonderful to find our lovely town in a guidebook! The book is a Colourmaster Publication, printed in 1973, but the author does not reveal their identity, either within, or on the cover. However, in the acknowledgements, the author and publisher thank a number of people, which includes the then Market Manager for the Borough of Loughborough, M. W. Green.

Let’s take a look at what appeared in the text.

“Ancient Loughborough is the second largest town in Leicestershire and has been described as the town of bells. It owes this title to John Taylor of Oxford who came to the town to recast the bells of All Saints Church. He was so taken with the town that he stayed, setting up his famous foundry in Cherry Orchard.”

The tower of Loughborough parish church


The writer goes on to comment upon the world-wide reputation of the bells that have been cast in Loughborough, including the Great Paul bell for St Paul’s Cathedral. The church of All Saints is said to be of 14th-century structure, although much restored, with a bell tower that is 500 years old. There was at the time of the writing of the book, a small museum to the memory of Taylor, although it does not specify which Taylor.






Loughborough's carillon



Of course, no book about ‘what to see’ in Loughborough would be complete without mention of the Carillon, the bells of which were of course made by Taylors:

“The 151 feet high war memorial in Queen’s Park also contains one of the finest carillons in the country. Forty-seven bells hang in there ranging in weight from over four tons to twenty pounds. It rang for the first time in 1923 and it was from here that the first broadcast of bell music was made.”






Without pausing for breath, the writer continues:

“Loughborough was also the home of John Cleveland, the so-called Cavalier Poet. His devotion to the Stuart cause was reflected in his work in which he heaped scorn on the Commonwealth and he was hounded by those he satirised. He died before the Restoration but his works were avidly read for many years although now they are little known, for his wit was topical and not enduring.”

We finally get to a section on Loughborough’s wonderful market and fair:

A fairground ride at Loughborough

“Loughborough is eminent as a market town and much of the history of the town is reflected in the story of its fairs and gatherings. The earliest known document relating to Loughborough fair is dated 1221 although the market has almost certainly existed before that time, probably from the right to hold the Thursday market granted by Hugh Despenser in 1206.

In 1227 the charter was a confirmation that the market was to be held on Thursdays and likewise the fair was to be a two-day event to commence on 31st July each year. The following year the right to hold an additional fair was granted, to be held in November and to this day the annual November pleasure fair is held on the second Thursday of that month.”

Some general history of the town follows:

“So the town, prosperous and growing, continued to expand and in the years 1400 to 1600 was an important centre for the wool trade. The Civil War left it unmarked, although Royalists on one occasion recruited a motley army after a fiery speech from the Market Cross. The town had passed to the Earls of Huntingdon and in 1677 there was granted the right to hold two additional fairs in the town, ‘on the Tuesday preceding Palm Sunday and on the second Tuesday after Easter Sunday’.

In 1742 the original cross was replaced by a new structure, known as the ‘butter and hen’ cross, which instantly evokes the picture of a bustling market place. It was described as having a ‘slated roof supported by eight round brick pillars set up in an octagon form’, and was topped with a sumptuous weather vane. Additional fairs flourished, including two described in contemporary accounts as ‘cheese meetings’. In 1829 the manorial rights in the markets and fairs were sold to the Loughborough Local Board. The Cattle Market continued to function in the Market Place until 1896 when it was moved to a new site. During recent years this has been much modernised and improved. The general market, after some years of uncertainty about its future, has been saved on its traditional site and made a pedestrian precinct with an added bonus of more space for open air trading. Its future as one of England’s oldest markets now seems assured.”

Background to Loughborough markets and fairs

So, here’s a bit of background to Loughborough’s markets and fairs. The charters for the market and fair were granted in the reign of Henry III, who ruled between 1207 and 1272, and who during this reign granted charters to over 1,000 towns and villages, of which Loughborough was one, and Ashby, Belton and Waltham-on-the-Wolds some of the others.

Henry III had become the monarch at the age of nine, thus the country was ruled by two regents, until Henry came of age. However, Henry signed up to the Great Charter of 1225, which was the definitive version of the Magna Carta created by King John in 1215, and which separated out rules pertaining to forests. This charter limited royal powers and protected some of the rights of the manorial barons.

Thus, in a royal letter (2), Henry III granted Hugh Despenser the right to hold a market, from 22nd January 1221 – 800 years ago! The market and fair was to be held at Despenser’s manor in Loughborough, and the permission granted in the royal letter was to be valid until Henry came of age. In 1227, on 12th February, once Henry had come of age, he granted a charter to Hugh Despenser to hold a market on a Thursday, and further confirmation was given in February 1229 and February 1233.

Loughborough’s market is therefore known as a Charter Market, and this status can only be changed by an Act of Parliament. The other type of market is a Statutory Market, one which has not been created as the result of a charter, rather being formed by an Act of Parliament.

The former manor house

Hugh Despenser’s manor house was in the area of Sparrow Hill, now occupied by an Italian restaurant, inside which, beams have been dated to 1477. This area is close to the church, and the churchyard would have been the original location for market stalls – barrows, carts, as well as static furniture. Because of the regularity of the market in such a well-known area, it would have been easy for people to remember when the market was, and for them to meet here to trade their goods. There would also have been plenty of witnesses, should anything go wrong!

It had been known for events to get a bit out of hand during these markets, and occasions when people set up stalls without permission, so in 1285, Edward I passed a law that stopped the holdings of markets and fairs in churchyards.

In August 2020, the inhabitants of Sileby set up a few market-type stalls in the car park at the Free Trade Inn. This sparked a whole debate about charter markets, the area around them that were protected by such a charter (in Loughborough’s case this was a radius of six and two-third miles) and competition, which reached the national news.

This wasn’t the first battle over the rights to hold a market, for in 1239, the town of Leicester claimed that its market trade was being damaged and put under threat by a Tuesday market that had been installed in nearby Narborough. Both markets had been in fact been going for quite some time. Narborough’s market day had changed in 1220 from a Thursday to a Tuesday, so perhaps this change of day was the concern in Leicester, although why this was raised as an issue nineteen years later, I cannot say.

Loughborough fair

Although today we think of fairs as being fun places, full of whizzy rides, bright lights, amusement, and food stalls, all to the cacophony of music, sirens and people screaming, fairs haven’t always been all about fun and games, but were once very important trading places.

Originally, the terms ‘market’ and ‘fair’ were used interchangeably, as charter fairs were essentially markets. The main differences between the market and the fair were that markets were held either daily or weekly, while fairs were usually an annual event associated with the feast day of a specific saint, and while markets traded in fresh produce and necessities, fairs traded in higher value, non-perishable goods, like homewares, pottery, furniture, and farm tools.  

The word fair comes from the Latin word ‘feria’, which means holiday, and as early fairs often began on the feast days of a saint, people would go to church in the morning, and then the fun of the holiday would begin after this. Amusements may have been provided by acrobats, fire-eaters, jugglers, and minstrels. Shops closed, but their proprietors were able to trade at the fairground.

Like markets, fairs could only operate if granted a charter, and there were close to 5,000 such charters granted in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Of these, most villages, towns and cities that were granted permission could hold only one fair per year, which probably lasted for just a few days. Some of the more important fairs were held at Winchester, Stourbridge, Bartholomew in London, and St Ives in Cambridgeshire (although at the origination of the fair, there was no town of St Ives: the town grew up there because of the fair).

Also like markets, fairs could operate if allowed so to do by an Act of Parliament. These fairs were called hiring fairs, statute fairs, or mop fairs, and were conceived from about the mid-1300s, when there was a shortage of workers, probably in part due to the black death. Later, around the mid-1500s, it became the custom for rates of pay for workers to be fixed on a specific day each year, which would hold true for the coming year, and be re-set the next year. So, workers were employed for a year, and then had to seek employment at the end of that year. Because so many people congregated at the annual fair, this became a good opportunity for workers and employers to seek each other out. People looking for work would often carry with them some visual indication of their trade: perhaps a shepherd would carry a crook, a housemaid a mop, hence the term ‘mop’ fair.

So, what of Loughborough fair?   

The background to Loughborough fair is almost identical to that of its market. In a royal letter (3), Henry III granted Hugh Despenser the right to hold a fair, from 22nd January 1221 – 800 years ago! On 12th February 1227, once the king had come of age, he specified that the fair be held on the eve or day before the feast of St Peter. A further letter was sent to Despencer in April 1227, and again confirmed in February 1229 and February 1233.

Today, Loughborough fair has now expanded to cover many of the town centre’s streets – and the Granby Street car park, which used to be the site of the cattle market. 
One of the rides on the Granby Street car park

For many years, the event always began on the second Thursday in November, but a few years ago this was extended, and now begins on the second Wednesday of November. The fair is opened at an official ceremony, when the current mayor reads out the charter, and there are usually many dignitaries in attendance.

Dignitaries at the opening ceremony


When the fair closes for the final time the stalls are quickly dismantled, and the following day, a visit to the town centre reveals barely any remnants of the amazing show. In some years, there is an even greater urgency for the fairground rides and stalls to evacuate, as the annual Remembrance Day parade, which passes through the town into the market place, always takes place on the second Sunday in November (which is closest to Armistice Day, 11th November), which is often the morning following the last night of the fair.

Remembrance parade through town, 2007


The year 1978

In October 1978 I arrived in Loughborough, the place that was to be my home for the next three years, but which has turned out to still be my home 42 years later!! Some friends and I went down to the fair the next month, excited to see what was on offer. 

In truth, I'd grown up with fairs, because the small town in which I had been brought up held a fair each May on the common: my house was beside the common and the dodgems were right in front of my house! Not only that, the town where my parents had been brought up, and where my grandparents lived also had an annual fair in May, although this was on what was now a large car park, but it was somewhere we visited most years.

Although I was excited to visit Loughborough, I have to say this excitement was tempered a bit by an experience I'd had only a couple of months before at the fair on Harrogate Stray, when I'd been persuaded to go on the waltzers. Hanging on for dear life, and practically falling off with dizziness, I realised why I'd never been on them before, and that sealed my relationship with fairground rides: great to look at, but not ever to be ridden on!

Anyway, in November 1978, we trooped into the town centre from the Forest Road direction and ended up at the start of the fair in Bedford Square, where there was a stallholder just standing there, without a stall, offering to guess people's ages. Well, my friends thought it would be a sure-fire bet that he'd never be able to work out my age, and they'd win the wager. I suspect their optimism had something to do with the fact that at the age of 18, I was still under five feet tall, and had something of a young-looking face. Needless to say, their naivety was not rewarded when the chap estimated I was 17!

The year 1979

By November 1979 I had been living in Loughborough for a year, and so this was the second time I visited the fair. Again, I went with friends on the Friday evening, and although we all had a great time, I was nursing a sore throat. By Sunday evening I was decided poorly, and on the Monday I was diagnosed with some dreaded lurgy, more than just the cold I thought I had. It took a couple of weeks to recover, although ever since then I have needed more sleep than I did before!  

The year 2020

During the year 2020, a year in which the country saw itself in various stages of lockdown due to a pandemic, the bustling market of previous years, with its stalls stretching from Devonshire Square down to Swan Street, partly along Market Street, and four layers in the market place, has been severely reduced in size, and now only presents a few stalls on Cattle Market, with two rows in the market place, and the approach to the various stalls is controlled by barriers.

The fair, one of the main highlights of the year, was not able to come to Loughborough in 2020.

A view of the new market layout. The Fearon Fountain celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2020


The year 2021

As mentioned above, permission to hold both a market and the fair was granted in 1221, making the year 2021 the 800th anniversary of both, a milestone that was to be celebrated in many different ways across the town. As at the moment the country is still in a lockdown situation, some of these celebratory events may not be able to take place, but we can rest assured that something will happen at some point!

It is to be hoped that the sentiment expressed in that guidebook quoted above, in relation to the market, still applies to the market, and applies also to the fair such that "Its future as one of England’s oldest markets now seems assured.” It simply wouldn't be Loughborough without its markets and fair.  

(1) Read about English Market Towns. Colourmaster International, 1973.

(2) Such a letter was a letter of instruction and was folded and sealed, securing the contents until opened by the recipient. Hugh Despenser was given permission to hold a market and fair in this way because an under-age monarch was not able to grant charters.

(3) This may have been included in the same letter as that which granted the right to hold the market to Hugh Despenser, or it might have been a separate communication? 

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 22 January 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough market and fair. Available from:https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/loughborough-market-and-fair.html [Accessed 22 January 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne         

Sunday, 17 January 2021

Loughborough cemetery Part 2

More memorials to World War Two PoWs



It appears there were over 1,000 Prisoner of War camps in Britain, and quite a few of these were in Leicestershire. Many are listed in this article and associated databank (2020) which includes the following:




 

o    Barkby Camp, Barkby Lane, Leicester, No.616 (previously a heavy anti-aircraft battery)

o   Farndon Road Camp, (Harrington Camp), Farndon Fields Farm, Market Harborough, No.49, (German working camp, standard type/caravan site)

o   Garendon Park, Loughborough, No.28

o   Gaulby Road, Billesdon, No.94 (German working camp, standard type)

o   Hathern Camp, Pear Tree Lane, Hathern, No. 590 (farmland)

o   Knightthorpe Camp, Loughborough, No.28 (German working camp)

o   Old Dalby Camp, Old Dalby Lane, Melton Mowbray, No.613 (large RAF depot with huts converted to accommodation)

o   Old Liberal Club, Charnwood Road, Shepshed, N0.152 (German working camp)

o   Quorn Camp, Wood Lane, Quorn, No.9/183 (Base camp, standard type)

o   Scraptoft, Thurnby, Leicester, No.4 (Base camp)

o   Shady Lane, Stoughton, Leicester, No.167 (Base camp)

There is, however, some debate as to whether or not Knightthorpe and Garendon were actually the same place: Garendon Hall was originally used as the headquarters for local munitions, but both seem to be known as Camp 28, with the main camp being towards the south of the estate lands. 

Last week we looked at some of the PoW camps close to Loughborough, and one in Stoughton which had a Loughborough connection. Let’s stay with the Leicester area, and a camp in Billesdon for a moment as there are more Loughborough connections, before moving closer to Loughborough.

A report in the Leicester Evening Mail of 6 October 1947 carried a report of the death of Peter Leugner. He was born on 17 September 1902 in the Ukraine, and died on 4 October 1947. Leugner was found hanging in a room at the Scraptoft PoW camp. The article says:

“It is understood that he was due for repatriation.”

Leugner has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.


Earlier in 1947, an inquest took place in Market Harborough on the death of Corporal Konrad Schubert. Schubert was born on 30 July 1906 in Paszowice, Poland, and died on 19 January 1947 in the camp at Billesdon. According to a report in the Leicester Evening Mail of 23 April 1947, Schubert was depressed following the death of his mother and sister, and worried about his two children who were living in the Russian part of Germany. His own ill-health had meant that he had been unable to work on the farm, and this made him more unhappy, although his fellow PoWs had not ever heard him talk about taking his own life.  

Mr Tempest Bouskell, the coroner for South Leicestershire, pronounced that Schubert had committed suicide whilst the balance of his mind had been temporarily disturbed, and passed on his sympathy to Corporal Schubert’s fellow prisoners.

Schubert has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.



We shall now leave these distant Leicestershire camps, and return closer to home, where we find a camp at Quorn which was used as such until about 1948. In the Nottingham Evening Post 12 August 1947, the following report appeared:

“A German prisoner-of-war, Baumann Hubert, died suddenly at the Quorn Camp yesterday. The body was removed to the Loughborough mortuary and the facts reported to the Coroner for North Leicestershire.”

Listed as Hubert Baumann on his memorial stone, Corporal Baumann was born 27 October 1924, died 11 August 1947, and has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery.




 


A report of a sad event appeared in the Daily Mirror of 18 September 1945:

COMEDIAN HANGED HIMSELF BECAUSE HE WAS LAUGHED AT.

A German giving evidence at a Loughborough, Leicestershire, inquest yesterday on a fellow prisoner of war who hanged himself at a camp said that the dead man had complained that other men in his working party made too much fun of his acting on the camp stage. He was a comedian.

Other prisoners said that the dead man, Sargeant Herbert Bruhn, 29, of Hamburg, had been unhappy for the last two weeks – they didn’t know why.

A police witness said he found no suggestion of either foul play or bullying. Recording a verdict that Bruhn hanged himself while his mind was disturbed, the coroner said it was difficult to understand the mind of a German, particularly a prisoner.”

Sergeant Herbert Bruhn, was born 28 January 1916 in Hamburg, died 16 September 1945, and has a memorial stone in Loughborough cemetery, but I have no idea which camp he was held in, nor in which camp he died.

The following report appeared in the Sunday Post 1 April 1945:

Allies sentence German boy to death. Karl Punzeler, of Monschau, 16-year-old boy, former leader of the local Hitler Youth, has been found guilty of espionage. Sentenced to death. This is an extract from ‘Die Mitteilungen’, the Allied newspaper, which is being distributed free in occupied Germany. It’s one of a list of sentences passed by Allied Military Government on civilians, and reported in the paper.”

The report continues with a list of misdemeanours, perpetrators, and punishments, in which we find the following:

“Franz Franke and Helmut Engel – for refusing to work as directed with a labour gang – 60 days.”

I believe Private Helmut Engel was born 30 April 1926 in Berlin-Neukolln, and died in Ankle Hill camp at Old Dalby, in Melton Mowbray, on 22 August 1947. The camp, which as well as housing over 3,000 soldiers, housed around 300 PoWs, during WW2. Quite why Helmut Engel has a memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery, I’m not sure.  








I have been unable to trace much information pertaining to Dr Karl Theodor Reuter, other than that which appears on his memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery. 

Dr Karl Theodor Reuter, was born 24 March 1914 in Herdecke, Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany, and died 11 December 1946 in Leicestershire, in the Thurnby Camp at Scraptoft.






Corporal Leonhard Rademacher was born on 24 May 1910 in Monchengladbach, died on 17 September 1946 in Garendon Park/Knightthorpe Camp, No.28, in Loughborough. He has a memorial headstone in Loughborough cemetery.


It will be noted from the death dates found on the memorial headstones that the majority of these eight people died in Britain after the end of the Second World War. There are likely to many and varied reasons why they still found themselves in Britain, rather than returned to their homeland: according to this article, published on the occasion of VE Day in May 2020, some stayed and integrated themselves into the British way of life because they had made good friends, or had fallen in love. Other reasons may have been that conditions in Germany were very difficult, and there was a delay in repatriation, but also perhaps because the British government resisted sending them home as the country was short of workers. Indeed, the final German PoW returned home as late as 1948.

The bridge at Shepshed watermill built by PoWs from Garendon Hall


The bridge at Shepshed watermill from a distance


Pear Tree Lane, approach from Derby Road


Site of the Pear Tree Lane PoW camp

Site of the Pear Tree Lane PoW camp

Site of the Pear Tree Lane camp


Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 17 January 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough cemetery part 2. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/01/loughborough-cemetery-part-2.html [Accessed 17 January 2021]

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