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Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45
Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45
Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45
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Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45

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More than 350 bombs fell on Wimbledon during the Second World War, killing 150 residents and injuring a further 1,071. Around 12,000 houses were damaged and 810 destroyed.Notable people discussed in this fascinating book include Ernest Leonard Harvey, who was onboard HMS Suffolk on the night Bismarck was spotted; Peter Walley, who died when he steered his crashing aircraft away from housing in the area; Pat Reid, Colditz Castle escapee; PoW Ernest Colman's "Wimbledon Variation"; casualties of the Burma-Thailand railway; and the members of the Mitcham Home Guard who were killed when a German parachute mine hit the Tower Creameries site on Wednesday, 16 April 1941 (after a relatively quiet couple of weeks).This well-researched book also includes a list of the lost hospitals of Wimbledon, as well as war memorials in the London Borough of Merton findings which have since been added to the Imperial War Museum's website, www.iwm.org.uk. It also provides an insight into factory worker jobs that have long-since bitten the dust. Tri-ang in South Wimbledon was a national by-word for toys until it started making munitions for real. And, with the outbreak of war, Vortexion of The Broadway, Wimbledon - a manufacturer of public address amplifiers - found itself under the direction of the Government for war work.Overall, this is a poignant testimony to the momentous efforts, bravery, self-sacrifice and determination of the people of Wimbledon during the Second World War, who sought to find normality in a reality so far removed from anything they had ever known.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 30, 2018
ISBN9781473894563
Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45
Author

Ruth Mansergh

Ruth Mansergh is a full-time mother of two who has worked as a journalist and as a freelance sub-editor/proofreader for publications including Financial Adviser and the Daily Mail. She was brought up in Cumbria, went to school in North Yorkshire, and has a degree in English with Social History from Leeds University. She has inherited her fathers keen interest in local history.

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    Wimbledon, Merton & Morden at War, 1939–45 - Ruth Mansergh

    WIMBLEDON, MERTON AND MORDEN

    AT WAR 1939–45

    WIMBLEDON, MERTON AND MORDEN

    AT WAR 1939–45

    RUTH MANSERGH

    First published in Great Britain in 2018 by

    PEN & SWORD MILITARY

    An imprint of

    Pen & Sword Books Ltd

    Yorkshire – Philadelphia

    Copyright © Ruth Mansergh, 2018

    ISBN 978 1 47389 454 9

    eISBN: 978 1 47389 456 3

    Mobi ISBN: 978 1 47389 455 6

    The right of Ruth Mansergh to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.

    Pen & Sword Books Limited incorporates the imprints of Atlas, Archaeology, Aviation, Discovery, Family History, Fiction, History, Maritime, Military, Military Classics, Politics, Select, Transport, True Crime, Air World, Frontline Publishing, Leo Cooper, Remember When, Seaforth Publishing, The Praetorian Press, Wharncliffe Local History, Wharncliffe Transport, Wharncliffe True Crime and White Owl.

    For a complete list of Pen & Sword titles please contact

    PEN & SWORD BOOKS LIMITED

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    Contents

    Introduction

    Chapter One Be Prepared, Germany is Arming

    Chapter Two Evacuation

    Chapter Three Early Stages of the Second World War

    Chapter Four Air Raid Precautions

    Chapter Five Home Guard Operational from May 1940

    Chapter Six When Toys Gave Way to Real Munitions

    Chapter Seven Captain William Schermuly

    Chapter Eight Calling All Workers

    Chapter Nine The First Bombing of Wimbledon, 1940

    Chapter Ten Peter Kenneth Walley

    Chapter Eleven The Blitz

    Chapter Twelve The Single Worst Night of Bombing

    Chapter Thirteen The Tower Creameries, 1941

    Chapter Fourteen The Sinking of HMS Hood

    Chapter Fifteen Life Became Grim

    Chapter Sixteen 1942 and 1943

    Chapter Seventeen 1944 and the First Flying Bomb

    Chapter Eighteen Happier Times with Brighter Prospects

    Chapter Nineteen Lost Hospitals of the Second World War

    Chapter Twenty We Will Not Go to War

    Chapter Twenty-one Military Deception

    Chapter Twenty-two Women Remembered

    Chapter Twenty-three VC Winners

    Chapter Twenty-four Lord Dowding, the Airman who Saved Britain

    Chapter Twenty-five Major Malcolm Munthe

    Appendix

    Short Biographies from the Wartime Seas

    Tracing Wimbledon, Morden and Merton Soldiers

    Wimbledon War Memorials

    St Mary’s Church, Merton Park

    King’s College School

    Morden Cemetery

    Further Memorials

    Firemen Remembered

    Prisoners of War

    Tennis Players and the Second World War

    Bibliography

    Dedication

    To my grandparents (late) Peter and Rita Weightman – ‘the Goshes’. Grandad lived at 100 Calabria Road, Highbury Corner and Gran at Gallia Road, Highbury Corner during the war. They moved to Seascale, west Cumbria in the late 1940s. Grandad, a nuclear scientist, worked at Sellafield (it was then Calder Hall and Windscale).

    Introduction

    Reports suggest that during the First World War, only one enemy bomb fell on Wimbledon. It reputedly was dropped from a Zeppelin on the King’s College School, Wimbledon Common playing field during the summer of 1917 where it failed to explode (merton.gov.uk). In the Second World War, more than 350 bombs fell, killing 150 residents and injuring a further 1,071. Around 12,000 houses were damaged and 810 destroyed (Museum of Wimbledon, 2016).

    Wimbledon – ranked in May 2017 as one of the top three places for young professionals to live (Lloyds Bank report) – has been inhabited since at least the Iron Age. The original medieval village – now known as Wimbledon Village – developed with a stable rural population coexisting alongside nobility and wealthy merchants from the city. Wimbledon Village/Wimbledon Park has seen many fine houses, none more so than Elizabethan Manor House (1588–1720), the Janssen House (1721–1900), the Marlborough House (1734–1785), and the Spencer House (1801–1949). The Old Rectory, a ten-bedroom house just north of St Mary’s Church, is Wimbledon’s oldest house, built around 1500 by the lord of the manor, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and used by Henry VIII. (It was on the market for £26 million in 2012).

    Wimbledon railway station opened on 21 May 1838, south of the current station. Until 1851, fresh water was only available from wells or springs. There were also a few deep artesian wells, such as the one that was dug for Wimbledon Park House in 1798. Under an Act of 1852, water was to be filtered and drawn from above Teddington Lock only. The Lambeth Water Company had already, in 1850, built ten miles of four 30in pipes taking water from Thames Ditton to Brixton. Water could therefore be supplied to Wimbledon in 1851, although it could not be pumped higher than half way up the hill. The Southwark and Vauxhall Company followed with a substantial waterworks at Hampton in 1854, supplying northern Wimbledon in 1857. Local historian Kirk Bannister, who won the Richard Milward Prize for Local History in 2014, said that clean water and local land companies were the real driving forces behind the development of Wimbledon town in the 1860s, rather than just the arrival of the railways.

    Wimbledon Common acted as a barrier to the advance of London. In 1864, Earl Spencer, Lord of the Manor of Wimbledon, attempted to pass a private parliamentary bill to enclose Wimbledon Common for the creation of a new park with a manor house and gardens and to sell part of it for building. In a landmark decision for English common land, permission was refused and a board of conservators was established in 1871 to take ownership of the common and preserve it in its natural condition. Today, it is a 1,100-acre public green space. The Wimbledon branch of the District Underground Line opened on 3 June 1889.

    On 4 July 1891, the Emperor of Germany, Kaiser Wilhelm II, made his first official visit to England and was honoured with a grand military display staged on Wimbledon Common: 22,000 British soldiers were lined up for the Kaiser to inspect. When the First World War started, many local people wanted to erase this event from Wimbledon’s history.

    The Tooting–Wimbledon–Hampton Court electric tram got under way on 2 May 1907 (the Wimbledon Society, 2012). In the early 1930s, Wimbledon was the final stop on the Tooting line. In 1950, the London Transport Executive announced ‘Operation Tramaway’ and the service disappeared from Wimbledon in January 1951. (Today’s Tramlink between Wimbledon and Elmers End, via East Croydon, Mitcham Junction, Morden Road and Merton Park, opened on 29 May 2000).

    South Wimbledon Underground station, between Colliers Wood and Morden on the Northern Line, opened in September 1926. It is on the corner of Merton (‘Mere tun’ – town on the marsh) High Street and Morden Road. Large areas of Wimbledon town centre including Centre Court Shopping Centre and the Everyday Church may be demolished to make way for Crossrail 2, a proposed rail route running from nine stations in Surrey to three in Hertfordshire (Wimbledon Guardian, 23 November 2015).

    Wimbledon Park is the name of an urban park in Wimbledon, an Underground station between Southfields and Wimbledon stations, and also of the suburb south and east of the park in the London Boroughs of Merton and Wandsworth. The Times described Wimbledon Park in 1865 as ‘covered in stately villas’. Parts of Wimbledon Park that had previously escaped being built on saw local authority estates constructed by the borough council to house some of those who had lost their homes in the Second World War.

    Merton Park had not only been the dream of the estate developer John Innes in 1867 but it also became his joy while living the life of the country gentleman and farmer as the owner of the Manor House. He and his brother James decided that the many fields around St Mary’s Church, Merton should be transformed into a semi-rural suburb for City businessmen.

    By the 1930s, the new focus for local growth had moved to neighbouring Morden, a rural parish throughout the nineteenth century. Morden Cinema, where the main feature film was always a Western, opened on Thursday 8 December 1932. The first major development of Lower Morden was the establishment in 1891 of Battersea New Cemetery.

    In the inter-war years, the stretch of London beyond Tooting into South Wimbledon, Morden, Mitcham and out into Beddington was one of the areas of greatest growth of light industry. The housing needs of this locality were met by the construction of the St Helier estate, which stretched from Morden Underground station to the River Wandle (which flows into the Thames at Wandsworth). The St Helier ‘a home in the country’ estate to provide good homes for the poorest Londoners housed 40,000 people by 1936.

    The London Borough of Merton was created on 1 April 1965 by uniting three local authorities. The Wimbledon and Mitcham Boroughs had long and quite heated debates about which of their names should dignify the new London Borough, with Merton eventually being chosen as a compromise, while Wimbledon (in Surrey from 1866–1965) ceased to be an independent borough in the county. Five new residential areas, with their own shopping centres, emerged to form the ‘Surrey-in-London’ Merton we know today: Colliers Wood, Mitcham, Morden, Raynes Park and Wimbledon. The original village of Mitcham lies to the west of Mitcham. Morden Hall, in the grounds of Morden Hall Park, is in the London Borough of Merton. In the 1870s it was sold by Sir Richard Garth to tobacco merchant Gilliat Edward Hatfeild (1864–1941), and was a military hospital during the First World War; after the war, Hatfeild made his home a cottage on the estate. He died in February 1941 and by his will, the estate was bequeathed to the National Trust. The Baitul Futuh Mosque in Morden, which describes itself as the largest mosque in Western Europe, was completed in 2003.

    CHAPTER ONE

    Be Prepared, Germany is Arming

    ‘All the while, across the North Sea, a terrible process is astir. Germany is arming,’ Winston Churchill, July 1934.

    The 1934 Wimbledon Championships took place at the All England Tennis Club (Church Road, Wimbledon) from 25 June until 6 July. By August 1934 Adolf Hitler, a wounded, decorated soldier of the First World War, had declared himself Fuhrer – the leader of Germany. In British history, rearmament covers the period between 1934 and 1939. Churchill’s demands for rearmament were not intended towards war (RAF Museum). He felt that the carnage of the First World War was terrible and should not be repeated.

    On 1 August 1936, Hitler opened the 11th Summer Olympic Games, held in Berlin; the Hindenburg, a large German commercial-carrying rigid airship, flew over the opening carrying the Olympic flag behind her. According to the International Olympic Committee, the Berlin Games are best remembered for Hitler’s failed attempt to use them to prove his theories of Aryan racial superiority. As it turned out, African-American sprinter and long jumper Jesse Owens (1913–1980) won four gold medals. There were 208 participants for Great Britain: 171 men and 37 women. Barbara Burke (1917–1998), Kathleen Margaret Tiffen (1912–1986), born in Croydon, and Dorothy Odam-Tyler were affiliated to Mitcham Ladies’ Athletic Club. James Ginty (1908–1999) was affiliated to Belgrave Harriers athletics club, Wimbledon. Burke won the silver medal in the 4x100 metres with her team mates Eileen Hiscock (1909–1958), Violet Olney (1911–1999), and Audrey Brown MBE (1913–2005). Tiffen qualified for the hurdles semi-finals but finished fifth out of six. Tyler won silver medals in the 1936 and 1948 Olympic Games high jump. Ginty competed in the men’s 3,000 metres steeplechase in the 1936 Olympics.

    The first Air Raid Precautions (ARP) Act came into force in January 1938, compelling local authorities to appoint ARP Wardens, set up emergency ambulance services, first aid posts, rescue, repair and demolition services, and expand their local fire services by forming and equipping an Auxiliary Fire Service (AFS). The AFS’s role was to supplement the work of brigades at local level.

    Two Wimbledon ARP Wardens delivering gas masks in September 1938 use a pram to speed up their work. (Merton Archives)

    An ARP Warden’s helmet, armband, whistle, badge and torch with hood to prevent light being seen from the air. (Wimbledon Museum, 2017)

    A gas mask designed for babies who could not wear face masks. Air had to be pumped into it by means of the bellows attached. (Wimbledon Museum, 2017)

    A small percentage of ARP Wardens were full-time and were paid a salary, but most were part-time volunteers who carried out their ARP duties as well as full-time jobs. One in six were women, and among the men there was a significant number of veterans of the First World War. At the beginning of the war, ARP Wardens had no uniform. They wore their own clothes, with the addition of a steel helmet, wellington boots and an armband. In May 1941, full-time and regular part-time wardens were issued with blue serge uniforms.

    The ARP Wardens were responsible for the handing out of gas masks, including gas masks for babies, and pre-fabricated air raid shelters such as Anderson shelters. The Controller of the ARP/Civil Defence (in 1941, the use of Civil Defence replaced the existing ARP) was normally the Town Clerk. At the beginning of the war, the Clerk to the Town Council of Wimbledon was Herbert Emerson Smith, born in 1897, appointed in 1919, a lawyer and dairyman’s son of Worple Road, Wimbledon, but he was forced to retire due to ill health. Until his successor Edwin Marrat Neave (1894–1978) of Birmingham was appointed, the task of organising Civil Defence fell to the Deputy Town Clerk, Arthur Rolt (1893–1972), who, in 1939, lived in Coombe Lane.

    Rolt was assisted by the Borough Engineer and Surveyor, Thomas Webster, who was also responsible for the Rescue Service and Communications throughout the war. F.H. Neville was ARP Shelter Superintendent (Merton and Morden News, 8 January 1943). Neave was later awarded an OBE for his work as Controller.

    Webster established a system of observation posts on the roofs of both the Town Hall and seventeenth-century property Eagle House on High Street, Wimbledon Village, from which almost every part of Wimbledon could be seen. Later, when the bombing started, compass bearings could be taken from these posts, which enabled the location of an incident to be established within a few minutes. (Eagle House has been converted into eight apartments, ready for occupation from Autumn 2017).

    The Council’s ARP Control Centre was established in the basement of the Town Hall (now the Old Town Hall and next to Centre Court Shopping Centre) at the Queens Road end of the building. More than 2,000 men and women staffed the ARP Control Centre, the thirty-eight ARP Wardens Posts, the First Aid Posts, the Auxiliary Fire Stations, and the Mobile Services Depots (mertonhistoricalsociety.org.uk). Wimbledon Air Cadets helped to take messages between different ARP Posts. And young people worked as fire watchers, warning the ARP Wardens if they saw fires started by enemy bombing.

    A frequent visitor to the Control Centre in the basement of the Town Hall was Alderman Augustus William Hickmott (1877–1972), Mayor of Wimbledon from 1926 to 1928, who retired from the Council in 1960 after forty years unbroken service. Whenever reports of damage or casualties came in, he would go out on foot to offer aid and advice to those who had suffered in any part of the borough. Hickmott, born in Kent, was a grocer who lived at 52 Merton Road with his wife, Marion Elizabeth Hickmott.

    A watercolour sketch (1810) of Eagle House. Credit Museum of Wimbledon

    I have found references to the following ARP Posts in what is now the London Borough of Merton:

    •Corner of Adela Avenue and Douglas Avenue KT3

    •All England Tennis Club SW19

    •Old Raynes Park library building in Aston Road SW20. Open-air billiards provided a popular pastime for Aston Road ARP workers (Raynes Park library has been housed in four different buildings all on the same site in Aston Road)

    •Corporation Depot, Queens Road, near Queen’s Road School SW19. This ARP post had been proposed on 6 December 1938 by Regional Inspector Captain Toyne of the Home Office in correspondence to the chief inspector. (This chief inspector may have been Colonel Pickering). On 3 July 1939, 161 personnel were proposed at this depot.

    •Fort Bailey, 56 Mitcham Park CR4. An image, taken on 31 January 1940, can be found on merton.gov.uk

    •Lingfield Road Village Hall SW19. Captain Toyne proposed to adapt the village hall into an ARP depot, but this had been earmarked by the military.

    •London Road, Morden, an ARP training centre.

    •Sewage Works, Durnsford Road SW19. This ARP post had been proposed on 6 December 1938 by Regional Inspector Captain Toyne in correspondence to the chief inspector. On 3 July 1939, forty-nine personnel were proposed at this depot.

    •Hall attached to Raynes Park Methodist Church, 195–205 Worple Road SW20. On 3 September 1939, eighty-three personnel were proposed at the Worple Road depot.

    Wimbledon Air Cadets serving as cycle messengers.

    The ARP Mobile Services comprised the Stretcher Parties with fifteen ambulances and ten cars, the sixteen Light and three Heavy Rescue Teams, and the Decontamination Parties. The Heavy Rescue Teams were based at the Council Highways Depot in Garth Road, Lower Morden, and the Decontamination Parties at the Control Centre (with some of their equipment stored behind the fire station next door). The Stretcher Parties were at the pavilion in Morden Recreation Ground, at Morden Farm school in Aragon Road and at the old Library building in Aston Road, Raynes Park. The Light Rescue Parties were based at these three and also at Garth Road. (Merton Historical Society, Bulletin No 167, September 2008). The Garth Road site was a Merton and Morden Urban District Depot, and not used by Wimbledon Borough.

    Medics and stretcher-bearers at an ARP post in Worple Road, 1942. (Museum of Wimbledon)

    The Merton and Morden Urban District Auxiliary Fire Service (AFS) station was based in the grounds of Joseph Hood School in Whatley Avenue, Raynes Park. The swimming pool at Wimbledon College, Edge Hill was a valuable source of water for the local fire brigade. The long-established District Fire Service, based at its station on Kingston Road, was integrated with ARP emergency procedures, but was still expected to deal with ‘civilian’ fires as well. This AFS brigade tackled the fires during the Blitz in central London.

    Dr Harold Ellis, Medical Officer of Health (MOH) for Wimbledon, headed First Aid and was assisted by Dr Patrick Doody, later to be MOH for the London Borough of Merton. Dr Doody was called to the armed forces in November 1940; his duties were taken over by Dr Cecil Stedman Cloake, who, in 1939, lived in Queen’s Road, Wimbledon. His son John Cecil Cloake (1924–2014), born in Wimbledon, where he attended King’s College School, served in the Royal Engineers in India and

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