Plaque in Stoke Newington commemorates first bombs dropped on London during First World War
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
A plaque has been unveiled commemorating the first bombs dropped by Zeppelins on London in WWI
One of the first explosive bombs that fell in London. This weighed 190 lbs and was dropped from a Zeppelin on the night of May 31st 1915, at the rear of the “Nevill Arms”, public-house, Nevill Road© Courtesy Hackney Council On May 31 1915, the first aerial bomb ever dropped on London - from a German Zeppelin - fell on the top floor of 16 Alkham Road in Stoke Newington.
The Zeppelin continued to travel southwards over areas of Hackney, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest dropping bombs in its wake and killing seven people, injuring 35 and causing forty one fires.
Remarkably the first bomb to fall, at Alkham Road, caused no deaths or injuries despite starting a fire to the top floor of the family home.
But for the people of London it was the beginning of intermittent German raids over the capital, both by German Zeppelins and bombers with over 20 more raids on London took place between 1915 and 1918, six of them affecting Hackney.
Now the 100th anniversary of the start of this aerial terror campaign has been marked with the unveiling of a plaque at Alkham Road.
The new plaque in Stoke Newington commemorating the first bombs dropped on London during the First World War. © Hackney Council Councillor Guy Nicholson, Hackney Council Cabinet Member for
Regeneration, who unveiled the plaque with local historian Ian Castle,
said the Great War acted as “the catalyst for great social change to
take place” but the warfare that brought about this change "was as
terrible as it was bloody".
“One aspect of this was in the
concept of taking a war into the heart of a civilian community many
hundreds of miles from the battlefield," he added.
“It must have been as
frightening as it was shocking for the community in Hackney and indeed
across London, to experience for the first time an attack from the sky.
"It
is right that in the centenary of the Great War we recognise those
profound moments that so shaped the world we now live in, and the courage that those on the home front in Hackney must have had to
draw upon as they faced this new and terrible aspect of warfare that was
literally on their doorsteps.”
A similar plaque commemorating
the event was erected in the 1990s on 31 Nevill Road where it was
thought the first bomb fell before recent research by Ian Castle came to
light.
27 Nevill Road showing damage caused by Zeppelin raid, May 1915© Hackney Council “I am delighted by the unveiling of this plaque, which
not only commemorates an important moment in the history of the borough
of Hackney, but also a significant point in the history of London too,”
said Ian.
“While most people are aware of the Blitz of 1940-41, many are
unaware that London was bombed from the air in the First World War
too.”
Hackney Museum and Hackney Archives will be launching a
number of exhibitions next year to further mark the centenary of the
First World War.
Hackney's collection of over 100 recruitment
posters that were displayed nationally and locally at the start of the
War will form the core of an exhibition relating to the Home Front in
Hackney at Hackney Museum from February to June 2016.
A further
exhibition, continuing the theme of recruitment and conscription, will
also be taking place, looking at Hackney’s conscientious objectors and
featuring local stories of people involved, which will be on display at
the Hackney Archives.
A number of local volunteers are currently
being supported by the Hackney Archives to help uncover more of
Hackney’s First World War history through researching historic
collections.
The research will help local people to engage and explore
the impact of the First World War on Hackney and the effects in had on
local communities at the time.
43-45 Dynevor Road - rear view showing Zeppelin air raid damage, May 1915© Hackney Council What do you think? Leave a comment below.More from Culture24's
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Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/military-history/first-world-war/art527752-plaque-in-stoke-newington-marks-first-bombs-dropped-on-london-in-first-world-war