Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Poem ~ Zeppelins Hit Norfolk - Thursday, 21 January 1915



Source: File: Zeppelin raid.jpg, 2015. Domestic housing following a Zeppelin raid on Yarmouth January 1915. January 21, 2014 by norfolklibrarystaff. 21 January 1915. [online] Available at: <http://norfolkinworldwar1.org/2014/01/21/zeppelin-raids-on-norfolk-2/Norfolk in World War One> [Accessed: 21 January 2015].

Source: File: Zeppelins.jpg, 2015. Identification chart for British and German airships, January 21, 2014 by norfolklibrarystaff. 21 January 1915. [online] Available at: <http://norfolkinworldwar1.org/2014/01/21/zeppelin-raids-on-norfolk-2/Norfolk in World War One> [Accessed: 21 January 2015].

Along the Norfolk coast sits Cromer -
An ordinary quiet English seaside town,
With open beaches and traditional pier -
Where on the evening of 20 January,
Gave witness to an unsettling sight,
That passed over their coastal skies.

With Cromer town, sitting in a hollow,
And at that time, in total darkness -
Was to save them from a bombing raid,
From hovering enemy Zeppelins - whose
Total numbers remained unverified.

The town authorities had been sent
Urgent news of Zeppelins, that moved
From the direction of Yarmouth, out,
Potentially towards other coast towns -
Giving time to shut down all their lights.

Although sceptic from other previous
False alarms - the people reacted
Swiftly to the appearance of soldiers,
Giving hurried orders  - so the lights
Everywhere were quickly extinguished.

The presence of those air machines,
Was first seen at 8 p.m. - at least two
Of them visible - in the company of one
Aeroplane, they moved slowly over their
Town - one mile away from the centre.

The dirigible could be traced, to drift
Over the Great Eastern Railway station - 
It could only be assumed the crew
Were off their course - missing main
Streets and buildings, close to the sea.

The Zeppelin was then steered about,
The high stack of the electric light works
Out towards another seaside town, -
Five miles westerly - likely to mistake
Neighbouring Sheringham for Cromer.

Runton – a resort west of Cromer,
Made witness at 8.45 p.m. of the craft.
Some men were talking on the street,
To hear a noise, like a traction engine.
A nearby soldier realised that this was
A Zeppelin – then the people all came
Out onto the streets, to see the shape.

Without lights, it was flying low, at under
Half a mile in the sky – the black bulk
Moving up the coast to Runton Gap -
At the boundary of Cromer – in a turn
To the left, the craft vanished out to sea;
No bombs fell on streets, full of people.

In Sheringham, one of two Zeppelins
Just visible - circled the church then,
To drop a bomb at Whitehall-yard,
Windham Street – hitting a house.
The shell crashed through the roof,
Right to the ground, without exploding.

In the drop, the fuse had detached  -
One room the shell passed through,
Contained a man and wife and their
Child, resting on a seat - the wooden
Frame of which was grazed in the fall.

Two more bombs were dropped - one
Near the home of Sir Digby Pigott  -
Another on wasteland on Priory road,
Fifty yards from a house - A foot wide
And two foot deep - then in the Beeston
Ward, fell a fourth, as a plane was seen,
Flying above houses of Windham Park.

by Jamie Mann.

Anon.,1915. Zeppelin Sighted – How Cromer Was Missed. The Daily Telegraph, [online] 1 Jan. P.9. Col.3. Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ww1-archive/11357843/Daily-Telegraph-January-21-1915.html [Accessed: 21 January 2015].

Mann, J., 2015. 100 years Ago - Poems by Jamie Mann. [letter] (Personal communication, 21 January 2015). 



#WW1 #WW1centenary #GreatWar #WW1poem #GreatWar #ww1centenary #worldwarone #worldwaroneremembered
#WW1Norfolk

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