Not Local
Bedworth |
76 of 100
Wed 24th Oct 2018 6:25pm
Kaga - Your description of Jordan and his cronies is spot on. They were just small fry who tried to stir up trouble around the area. Generally people recognised them for what they were, and just ignored them.
Occasionally they did go a bit too far, or they picked on the wrong people. In the early 60's they painted racist slogans on walls and bridges in Leamington Spa - the locals were not amused. In the late 70's they upset the big Scotsmen in Corby just at the time they been told that they were losing their jobs in the steel industry. These same men had moved to the new town of Corby only a few years before to escape unemployment in Scotland. The Corby people were adamant they would fight their own fight with the government of the day and they gave that message very robustly to Mr Jordan's lot, to those who had come only to oppose the right wing, and in fact to everybody who was not from Corby. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Wearethemods
Aberdeenshire |
77 of 100
Thu 25th Oct 2018 11:01am
On 24th Oct 2018 2:51pm, Slim said:
As I understand, but didn't mention it in my previous post, the same happened at the Cov. G&T with the noose and everyone threatened to clasp their hand around the rope so the authorities couldn't charge hundreds with murder!On 24th Oct 2018 11:10am, Wearethemods said:
... and the guy playing the pipes on the Ambulance Station roof was identified as a worker from the Cov. Gauge & Tool, who could not go back to work and eventually was paid off. A man piping a lament for James McDade was on the evening televison news, and co-workers at one of the Lucas plants recognised him. They arrived at work early and strung up a noose from one of the roof trusses, lying in wait for the piper to turn up for work. Security and police had to intervene to thwart the planned revenge. I have no idea what the eventual outcome was.
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Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
78 of 100
Thu 25th Oct 2018 5:29pm
Wearethemods,
Are you sure he was in the Royal Warwicks? I knew him as in the Medical Corps, an escape route for some people who had sympathy with the other side, so they did not have to fight against them - half-way house to being a true believer of Conscientious Objector as was Oswald Mosley. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
79 of 100
Thu 25th Oct 2018 6:26pm
As has been suggested, the last few posts have been moved to this more closely related topic from their original location in the Anti Racism / National Front in Coventry, c.1960-80 topic. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Not Local
Bedworth |
80 of 100
Thu 25th Oct 2018 8:39pm
Kaga - It was Enoch Powell who was a Brigadier in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment during World War Two. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
81 of 100
Thu 25th Oct 2018 9:33pm
On 23rd Oct 2018 12:02pm, NeilsYard said:
As a slight aside as we've mentioned the IRA - I happened to be baptised by one Father Fell at All Souls in Earlsdon. A few years later he was arrested for being a leader of an IRA cell around Coventry.
Never met him, but can still picture him from the papers - thin, slightly-built, short black hair, glasses - quite a harmless looking chap.
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Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
82 of 100
Fri 26th Oct 2018 9:40am
Non-Local.
Yes I was aware of that, but thanks anyway. My cousin was a Lt in the Warwicks, they were a very hardened Infantry Reg't - had I failed the Paras I would have been sent there too, it was my parent Reg't. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Prof
Gloucester |
83 of 100
Tue 23rd Apr 2019 11:11pm
After the IRA bomb exploded.
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Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Midland Red
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84 of 100
Sun 25th Aug 2019 1:29pm
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Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
85 of 100
Wed 11th Nov 2020 12:17pm
On behalf of member Inyoni I'm posting his memories of that dreadful day:
"In the afternoon of Friday August 25 1939, I and two or three young friends were playing in between the then undeveloped area of Sadler and Burnaby Roads and today's Beake Avenue, which then terminated at Links and Wallace Roads. We were approximately central to the city side of Berwin Avenue, the Whitmore Park School area was then an Oat field awaiting harvesting. The Scotchill depression from us towards the city was vacant of |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
86 of 100
Wed 11th Nov 2020 12:44pm
Great insight Rob/Inyoni - these are the things that would never be known about if it was not for the forum. Must have had some force to have been noticeable from Radford/Keresley |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Helen F
Warrington |
87 of 100
Tue 17th Nov 2020 1:34pm
I forgot to say thanks to Inyoni for sharing that memory |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Malvern
Somerset |
88 of 100
Tue 17th Nov 2020 5:14pm
The August bombing is referred to as the "forgotten" one but I've just found out about this event reported in the Coventry Herald of 6th May 1939:
I've just found this while looking into the Priory Gate building (The Flying Standard). This event took place during the IRA bombings of 5th May 1939. The bombs were left in the early hours of the morning and no one was injured. 5 stores were targeted - Messrs Goodlys, furniture store in Earl Street, Corporation Electricity Showrooms in Corporation Street, Messrs Rhodes, china shop in Trinity Street (7 Trinity Street part of the Priory gate building) and Messrs Anslows, furnishers in High Street. A fifth bomb was successfully removed by police officers from the Co-operative Society's stores in Smithford Street. I see that the police officer in the report is P.C. Rollins! Malvern
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Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
89 of 100
Thu 11th Nov 2021 10:19am
To Rob Orland
At the beginning of the 20th century, there were scores of Irish families living and working peacefully alongside Coventry families.
Early in 1919 Eamon de Valera, one of the foremost in Irish politics, escaped with two other prominent leaders from Lincoln gaol, where they had been imprisoned for attempting to organise a Sinn Fein rising in Ireland. He and his followers had become extremely active, adding to the problems of the Government. Smuggled back to Ireland, in a muddy path in a ploughed field, he took the salute to about thirty Irish Sinn Feiners, who filed past him. The very start of the IRA.
1939, with so many Irish in Coventry, it was passed over for a bomb explosion. To impress Nazi Fascists they could do damage anywhere in Britain, for money, arms and support, they set explosives in Leicester Railway Station to time when train with schoolchildren arrived. The train was late, the explosives went off, little damage or injury, the schoolchildren unhurt.
A hurried bomb was built, placed in Coventry's main shopping area. It exploded killing many (you know the story), but being hurried it was easy to trace, and people were arrested. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
90 of 100
Thu 11th Nov 2021 12:01pm
Thank you Kaga. This background information is of interest to many of us, not just me, though.
For those who haven't yet seen it, however, this marvellous article "Not Forgotten, the 1939 IRA bomb attack" by Simon Shaw, might be of some relevance. |
Local History and Heritage - IRA Broadgate Bomb 1939 |
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