21/11/2009
Helen Mark is joined by Time Team's Professor Mick Aston in Staffordshire to find out about the Hanbury Crater, the result of what is thought to be Britain's largest explosion.
In the Staffordshire countryside, just a few miles from Burton upon Trent, a wire fence surrounds a crater in the landscape, 100 feet deep and over half a mile wide. A sign warns passers by that 'This land contains unexploded bombs and in the event of an explosion, injury or death could be caused'. What is widely believed to be the UK's largest explosion occurred on November 27th 1944 when an underground ammunition store at nearby Fauld blew up and 3-4,000 tons of explosives devastated acres of countryside, killing 70 people, hundreds of sheep and cattle and completely obliterating a nearby farm. The Cock Inn in Hanbury was so badly damaged that it had to be completely rebuilt. For 18 people whose bodies were never found the crater remains their graves, marked by a granite memorial stone close to the perimeter fence.
On the 65th anniversary of the explosion, Helen Mark visits Hanbury, the scene of this wartime tragedy, and talks to local people and survivors about their memories of that day and how the explosion changed their lives and the landscape around them forever. For over 40 years, nothing would grow in what became known to locals as the 'bomb hole' until slowly nature began to reclaim the Hanbury Crater. Helen is joined by the Time Team's Professor Mick Aston and together they visit the crater and go underground at Fauld Gypsum Mine, which dates back to Roman times. The mine was connected to the ill-fated ammunitions store by a reservoir which supplied water to run steam-powered machinery in a nearby plaster factory. When the explosion happened the greatest loss of life was among the factory workers and those underground, who were either drowned or gassed as tonnes of mud and toxic fumes engulfed them. How could such a tragedy happen?
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- Sat 21 Nov 2009 06:07Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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Open Country
Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of Britain