On the night of 17th/18th March 1945 the city of Hull was under attack for the first time since 1943. A lone Heinkel dropped fragmentation grenades (with inbuilt fuses, detonating on impact with the ground) and opened up with machine guns killing 13 people and injuring 22. (See BBC News for 17th March .)
Chotie, however, was still in Parkstone….
Letter written Sunday18th March 1945
Sunday March 18th 45
My darling husband,
This is going to be short, because I feel pretty ‘B…..’ as I am going back to camp tomorrow. Have to start at 8 o’clock in the morning – unearthly hour.
While cleaning out, this last week I found this tie, which I have enclosed. Is it light enough? If it is not wearable send it back and I will dye it or something.
Don, Ted’s brother, has been down and we went to Church* this morning. Everyone was congratulating him thinking he was my husband. Poor Don.
Margaret, Beryl & Don & I went down to 'The Sloop' last evening. Poor Marg had to have shandy because of feeding Roger. None of the ‘old crowd’ were there, except the ‘man from Kent.’
Don & I sneaked down after Church, this morning, for a quick one.
We have had another present, darling. Three pre-war tea-cloths (what you wipe up with) from Mrs Johnson. Jolly useful.
I phoned up Ethel & Cyril, my cousins, today. They wished us all the best and are going to dish out something when we get our home – when? They both wished you all the luck in what you are doing out there.
I must finish now, my dearest and get on with my packing.
Will write when I reach camp.
Take care, darling – God bless,
All my love & kisses,
Chotie.
XX
*Parkstone Congregational Church opposite the Hollies in Commercial Road – now Parkstone United Reformed Church. Dick and Chotie met at the Congregational Church Youth Club. The Hollies, including the dairy, was knocked down in the 1960s and replaced with a tyre shop.
Enclosed with this letter was a small notice from a newspaper:
A ‘Special Licence’ enabled couples to get married without waiting the usual three week period for ‘calling the banns’ – giving notice of the proposed marriage for three successive Sundays in church.
Chotie and Dick had evidently decided to get married while he was on leave and could not have done so in the time without special licence.
© Chotie Darling
WAR DIARY of 52nd (Lowland) Recce Regt RAC March 1945
– Lt Col J.B.A. Hankey OBE
Date 18th Place MENZELEN: 2 casualties Weather – Fine
Strength - 905 men, 188 tanks/armoured cars/guns
‘Regiment less ‘A’ Sqaudron ordered to do Traffic Control for Operation PLUNDER. Two casualties in ‘C’ Squadron from shelling.’
‘A’ Squadrons detached.
(From the War Diary of the 52nd Reconnaissance Regiment held by the Archive and Reference Library, the Tank Museum, Bovington, Dorset.)
52nd Recce Roll of Honour includes the following who died on 18th March 1945:
Trooper Jack Weston (age 22) of ‘C’ Squadron
who is laid to rest in the Reichswald Forest War Cemetery, south-west of Kleve in Germany.
(From ‘The Fighting Fifty-Second Recce’ by Carl Shilleto, Eskdale Publishing 2001. See photo.)
We will remember them.
Recent Comments