Primrose
USA |
31 of 243
Wed 18th Dec 2013 2:24pm
I enjoyed the film too but for me it was spoiled by the non-Coventry accents. Mum thought the dancing was possibly at the Courtaulds or GEC ballrooms but she is far from certain. I felt the singers didn't have Coventry accents so maybe it wasn't in Coventry at all. Also, while soldiers carried their guns at the beginning of the war, they didn't at the end, or at least my mum's brother didn't. Sorry for all the negatives in this post but am behind with the Christmas shopping and haven't got time to search my brain for more upbeat wording! |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
deanocity3
keresley |
32 of 243
Wed 18th Dec 2013 3:03pm
The whole 15min film can be watched at the Imperial War Museum site. Go on the site and search, it's called 'Coventry reborn' |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Baz
Coventry |
33 of 243
Tue 24th Dec 2013 9:34pm
On 29th Nov 2011 12:57am, The spirit of Coventry said:
http://video.answers.com/the-london-blitz-and-the-bombing-of-coventry-in-1940-516911282
There is some good footage in this video. The morning after the blitz.
Do we know where the mass graves are of those who lost there lives that night are.. Just at the end of that video it mentions them but not where. It makes me so sad to think of all the women, children and elderly that have lost there lives in THIS city that night. Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
mickw
nuneaton |
34 of 243
Tue 24th Dec 2013 9:39pm
Hi Baz I may be wrong but my dad always said the mass graves were in London Road Cemetery |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Baz
Coventry |
35 of 243
Tue 24th Dec 2013 9:42pm
Thanks mickw. I did have an idea it might have been there. I have never had the chance to walk around the London Rd Cemetery, but I do intend to at some point. Thanks. Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
36 of 243
Fri 28th Mar 2014 10:47pm
Michael Portillo stops off in Coventry on the great british railway journeys on "Yesterday+1" at 11.30pm. A repeat of the 2010 showing. He talks to a lady about the bombing of the city. |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
37 of 243
Wed 4th Jun 2014 11:47pm
Just reviving this as I re-watched the Bill Owen film that Deano posted a while ago - In one shot on Earl Street / Jordan Well - what were the underground arched 'vaults' shown at around 05:15 here? |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
TonyS
Coventry |
38 of 243
Thu 5th Jun 2014 7:34am
They appear to be below where "Browns" cafe used to be. Most of the buildings around there had below-ground chambers. Not far from here is Drapers Hall whose cellars were used as air-raid shelters during the war. Just need someone to identify what used to stand there.
Now if only we had access to Google Street view from 1935! |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks |
39 of 243
Thu 5th Jun 2014 8:31am
Hi all
Below ground level rooms are common in cities that had major pre-war housing, like Sheffield as an example. It's difficult to find a house there that has not got a cellar. |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Helen F
Warrington |
40 of 243
Thu 5th Jun 2014 2:17pm
Everything between Bayley Lane and just after the Mattock and Spade was severely damaged or flattened. There were about three buildings left between there and Freeth Street. Many of them would have had cellars, especially the pubs, though I'm wondering if the older buildings might have had stone cellars. not brick. It was a heavily rebuilt area, with only a few obviously medieval survivors.
Britain From Above showing Jordan Well
Herbert Cox image of the area. There are very few photos of this stretch.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
dutchman
Spon End Thread starter
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41 of 243
Thu 5th Jun 2014 3:13pm
The Mattock & Spade was also destroyed in the bombing. It was replaced by a temporary pub with the same name.
The cellars could be the basement of an industrial building in the stretch of Freeth Street which ran behind Jordan Well.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
42 of 243
Sun 19th Oct 2014 3:08pm
Primrose, hi. Sometime in the fifties I walked into the bar of the Hotel Leofric a lone gentleman in the bar offered to buy me a drink, he was at the first opening or was opening the new Belgrade (Compo as he became). We chatted, can't remember what we discussed, but he certainly seemed to have a soft spot for Coventry.
I certainly carried a rifle through Coventry in 45 when on leave and going to a new posting.
Someone mentioned the Rex cinema, if memory serves me correctly, it never showed a film, it was about to show 'Gone with the wind', but went with the bomb. |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
dutchman
Spon End Thread starter
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43 of 243
Sun 19th Oct 2014 5:11pm
The Rex opened in February 1937, three and a half years before it was bombed. The first film to be shown was "San Francisco" starring Clark Gable and made in 1936. I've yet to see any evidence to support the off-quoted "Gone with the Wind" legend.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
44 of 243
Sun 19th Oct 2014 8:48pm
Dutchman Hi, The cinema I was thinking of was just inside corporation street opposite the gas showroom, so now you got me scratching my head, where was the Rex, and what was the cinema that got bombed as mentioned? |
Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath | |
dutchman
Spon End Thread starter
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45 of 243
Sun 19th Oct 2014 9:04pm
Hi Kaga
Yes that was the Rex. It was more than just a cinema though, it was a shops, restaurant and office complex which stretched nearly half the length of Corporation Street.
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Wartime and the Blitz - Bombing aftermath |
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