Easterngreen
Eastern Green |
61 of 477
Wed 5th Jun 2013 7:29pm
I had read that myself funnily enough yet the Traction pole is there halfway down Warwick Ave? The only thing I can think of is maybe they were quite serious about one of these extensions, even fitting the street furniture, before deciding against it or abandoning it? The lines under the road surface is possibly just speculation on my part but the pole is the exact same design as the other existing poles (such as Albany Road) and is of a similar age? |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
dutchman
Spon End |
62 of 477
Wed 5th Jun 2013 7:47pm
Hi all
It's been established in the Coventry Transport forum that the poles are sewer ventilation pipes and nothing to do with the tramway system.
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Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
dutchman
Spon End |
63 of 477
Wed 5th Jun 2013 8:55pm
On 5th Jun 2013 5:51pm, charabanc said:
According to a website by Ken Crawley, two different routes to include Warwick Avenue were proposed as possible extensions to the tram system but later shelved.
I think you'll find that was Warwick Road not Warwick Avenue?
Possible Extension of the System
Warwick Avenue has never had tramlines and there have never been any proposals to install any there.
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Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
Easterngreen
Eastern Green |
64 of 477
Wed 5th Jun 2013 8:57pm
Hi Dutchman,
Thanks for that. That is an interesting little bit of information. They obviously had a matching pattern in the metalwork across a lot of different street furniture. |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
charabanc
Coventry |
65 of 477
Thu 6th Jun 2013 12:59am
Quite right, Dutchman, (on checking) and the sewer ventilation system explains the confusion. They were possibly a job-lot bought from the same manufacturer and convertible for either use. I wouldn't fancy living near them on a warm day, though! |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
Midland Red
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66 of 477
Tue 18th Jun 2013 12:15pm
Interesting papers using this link to The National Archives, mainly referring to Coventry, 14/15 November 1940 |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry Thread starter
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67 of 477
Tue 18th Jun 2013 8:17pm
Fascinating stuff, many thanks for finding that Cliff.
I was amused at the transcription of "V.H.P. beans" though - instead of "V.H.F. beams" |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
Dreamtime |
68 of 477
Wed 19th Jun 2013 2:33am
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Rob Orland
Thread starter
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69 of 477
Wed 19th Jun 2013 7:31am
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Baz
Coventry |
70 of 477
Wed 19th Jun 2013 10:44pm
Sorry for going back on topic, but as a young person that was born after the war, I love this local history. I have seen somewhere that Churchill knew that Coventry was the target a few days before the Blitz started but not to give it away that we could read/intercept their messages, it was decided not to act upon the information. The large factories that were producing guns, ammo, and even planes for the war effort were a big target, but as it said in the National Archives link at the start of this topic, the working class were also targeted. The King visited our Cathedral in the aftermath of the Blitz, to see for himself and boost morale in the city...
Always looking forward to looking at the past.
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Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
morgana
the secret garden |
71 of 477
Wed 19th Jun 2013 11:09pm
Great find Baz, I wonder what the F in the left hand corner is for . |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
dutchman
Spon End |
72 of 477
Thu 20th Jun 2013 12:02am
On 19th Jun 2013 10:44pm, Baz said:
I have seen somewhere that Churchill knew that Coventry was the target a few days before the Blitz started but not to give it away that we could read/intercept their messages, it was decided not to act upon the information.
That theory has been debunked many times not least by a section on this site: Defending Coventry
To put things in perspective, it was hardly a secret that Coventry was likely to be bombed and many people had fled the city already. What no-one could have foreseen - even if they had correctly identified the target - was the scale and ferocity of the attack. |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
flapdoodle
Coventry |
73 of 477
Thu 20th Jun 2013 7:27am
I'm with Dutchman on this. This 'Coventry Sacrifice' story is a myth that appeared some years after the end of WWII. The story just doesn't make sense - but it appears to have entered common consciousness and people who use the myth do not do their research properly. The Science Fiction series, Babylon 5, from about 10+ years ago even mentioned it!
Coventry was so likely to be bombed that the city was used for a training exercise in the event of a blitz. The whole myth doesn't add up - the real story appears to one of bad intelligence.
I have heard people get Coventry's blitz confused with the so called 'Baedeker' blitz - these were raids on historic towns (York, Canterbury, Exeter) that had no real strategic value. This was an attempt to demoralise the population, and as Britain found out later, intense bombing of places like Dresden didn't even have that effect. The Nazis took the targets from a popular German guide book...
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Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
morgana
the secret garden |
74 of 477
Sat 22nd Jun 2013 11:21am
I have mixed feelings on this one, as wasn't there plans to knock Coventry down with new plans to rebuild before the war, then watching yesterday programs it states that the Germans done them a favour by the bombing as it saved them money to knock the slums down in London, also Coventry was the only town's Cathedral in the whole of the UK to be destroyed.
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Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry Thread starter
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75 of 477
Sat 22nd Jun 2013 12:01pm
I think after the Blitz there was almost certainly a little bit in the back of our Town Planners' minds that felt the Germans had saved them from looking like the "bad guys" in knocking down the old city centre. However, I doubt very much if before the big raid anyone in our country would've wished to risk sacrificing hundreds of lives just for the sake of saving some bulldozing.
The loss of our cathedral was just a sad consequence of blanket bombing our central area. In such a terror raid, armament factories were the excuse for the raid, everything else within the area just side-effects. |
Wartime and the Blitz - The Blitz - 14th November 1940 |
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