St. Swithun’s

St. Swithun's

St. Swithun’s is an open and friendly church in the town of East Grinstead in West Sussex, within the Diocese of Chichester. the building is 18th-century rebuilt in medieval style, with interesting round windows in the clerestory.

There has been a church on the site since the 11th century. It was struck by lightening in 1772 and after re-building it was opened in 1789.

Historical Background
This hill-top site where several tracks met would have been the obvious place to build a church when our area began to be settled in the late tenth century: and one of the most popular saints of that time, St Swithun (Bishop of Winchester, 852-862), was the unsurprising choice for its patron. We can only speculate about the original building and how it developed but pictures from the late eighteenth century show that a church of largely fourteenth and fifteenth century style stood here until 1785 when the collapse of its tower (poorly rebuilt in 1684 after being struck by lightning) made the present building necessary.

A national appeal for funds (a ‘brief’) raised £516 in 1788. Building began the next year but funds ran out when little more than the walls had been constructed. An Act of Parliament was therefore obtained authorising trustees to levy rates and raise loans. By 1793 the church was in use but in 1811 a further Act was necessary to pay off loans of £4000 and to raise as much again to build the tower, a task completed the following year. By the time the final loan repayments were made, in 1876, the church had cost some £30,000.

The local gentry and tradesmen responsible for all this were originally led by Gibbs Crawfurd, M.P., whose house Saint Hill was being built at the same time. It was probably he who secured one of the leading architects of the day, James Wyatt, to design the church, which is still structurally as he planned it, except for the tower, modified by William Inwood, a protégé of Charles Abbot, Speaker of the House of Commons, who settled at Kidbrooke, Forest Row, in 1805 and soon came to the fore in the rebuilding work.

Normally at this date such a church would be in classical style on basilican plan or an open hall without aisles or dividing columns. It would be roofed by a plaster decorated barrel vault. However, here Wyatt combined the requirements of the Church at the time with a respect for the earlier traditional mediaeval church on the site, displaying remarkable sensitivity a generation before the establishment of the Gothic Revival. Thus, for example, his pillars are very like those in the previous church and he provided a small structural chancel.

A programme of restoration in 1874 inaugurated the present appearance of the interior by removing Wyatt’s plastered paneling from the walls, taking down his flat ceiling, converting one bay of the nave into a choir and installing the present seating. In 1876 the present roof was put in. Stained glass began to be inserted in the windows at about the same time. Since then chapels have been formed either side of the choir, east windows have been inserted in them, an organ has been built in the gallery intended for singers and instrumentalists, and numerous furnishings and decorations have been installed.

Source: St. Swithun’s

Standen

Standen

Standen was built in 1892-4 for a prosperous London solicitor, James Beale, and his large family. He chose Philip Webb as his architect, who was one of William Morris’ closest friends and colleagues. Standen takes its name from one of three farms which James Beale purchased in 1890 - Great Hollybush, Stone and Standen. Standen farmhouse was a small low-pitched cottage which stood to the south of the present house and was demolished in 1896. It was Great Hollybush farmhouse which Philip Webb incorporated into the new house.

Standen is a fine show-piece of the late 19th-century Arts & Crafts Movement, featuring rich William Morris textiles and wallpapers, complemented by contemporary furniture, ceramics and pictures of the time.

The recently re-furbished Conservatory has been replanted with mimosa, maidenhair and hare’s-foot ferns, bird of paradise plants and Norfolk Island pine together with other plants identified from Mrs Beale’s Diaries and photographs of the Conservatory from the early 1900s.

Standen boasts a beautiful hillside garden with wild flowers, azaleas, rhododendrons, roses, ferns, an orchard and croquet lawn. There are also woodland walks on the estate.

West Hoathly Road, East Grinstead, West Sussex RH19 4NE
Telephone: 01342 323029

Source: The National Trust

The Bluebell Railway

The Bluebell Railway is a heritage line running for nine miles along the border between East Sussex and West Sussex, England. Steam trains are operated between Sheffield Park and Kingscote, with an intermediate station at Horsted Keynes.

The railway is managed and run largely by volunteers, and has the largest collection of steam locomotives after the National Railway Museum (NRM) and a collection of carriages and wagons which is unrivalled in the south of England. In addition to the 30 locomotives resident on the line, one more is on loan from the NRM (another has recently returned there), and a project to recreate a long-lost type of locomotive (A London, Brighton and South Coast Railway H2 Class Atlantic) from a few surviving parts is well under way.

Dr Richard BeechingThe Bluebell was the first preserved standard gauge railway in the world – it opened in 1960, shortly after the line from East Grinstead to Lewes was closed by Dr Beeching & British Railways. It preserved steam locomotives before the cessation of steam use on British mainline railways in 1968.

During his tenure, Dr Beeching became a hugely controversial figure when he recommended a massive programme of railway closures to cut the cost of running the railway system. He was also responsible for modernising many aspects of the railway system.

The intentions of the Beeching Report were to remove the unprofitable branch lines while keeping the highly profitable main lines, using the money saved to update the system and speed the progress of the Modernisation Plan. Unfortunately, the Treasury decided that since the money was no longer needed for the support of branch lines, it could be spent by other departments, making the plans futile.

Another mistake in the plans was the assumption that if a branch line closed, passengers would drive to the nearest railhead and still use the railway for the rest of their journey. Instead, they found it more convenient to drive the entire journey, costing British Rail far more in the long term.

The Bluebell Railway Preservation Society is working to reinstate the remaining two miles of line from Kingscote to East Grinstead, having completed the initial extension from Horsted Keynes to Kingscote in 1994. The Bluebell have now bought the station site at East Grinstead however, the station may well be changed to provide a direct link with Network Rail [citation needed].

Looking North, towards Horsted Keynes, from Sheffield ParkWork has now actively started on the final push to the North towards East Grinstead where the line will once again join to the national rail network. The small matter of 300 metres of rubbish filling a 50 metre deep cutting will be removed by convoys of road freighters, although some of the clay is being taken south by rail to help fill the site of a removed embankment on the old Ardingly spur.

It is hoped that in the future this spur will also reconnect with the main London to Brighton line at Copyhold Junction, restoring a major bypass of the main London–Brighton line. During the Second World War the signal box at Horsted Keynes was manned day and night to provide a second route for troop trains.

The station at Sheffield Park has been restored to a generally Victorian ambience, as close as possible to how it would have appeared during the time of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (up to 1922). Horsted Keynes tries to emulate the style of the Southern Railway (1922–1948), and Kingscote echoes the early British Railways period (1950s).

Christmas is a peak time for bookings, as the Santa Special is very popular with families. Complimentary Clown entertainment, a children’s visit from Father Christmas, Mince Pies and refreshments are served during the journey.

The Bluebell Railway has been used as the location for several films and television programmes. In October 1999 the film The Railway Children based on the book by E Nesbit was filmed at the railway.

Looking South, towards the former line to Newick and Chailey and to Lewes, from Sheffield ParkThe Bluebell Railway is also featured in The Railway Series written by the Rev. W. Awdry. The book was called Stepney the “Bluebell” Engine, with Stepney as the main character, visiting the fictional Island of Sodor.

Ashdown Forest

It is famous as the setting for the Winnie the Pooh stories written by A. A. Milne for his son Christopher Robin. Poohsticks Bridge, Galleon’s Lap, Roo’s Sandpit, the North Pole, the Hundred Acre Wood, Heffelump Trap and The Dark and Mysterious Forest can all be found on Ashdown Forest. Ashdown Forest was once a royal hunting ground and was originally protected by Act of Parliament in 1885.

On the Forest is Ashdown Forest Llama Park.

The Forest was at one time home to a number of Red-necked Wallabies, the result of an escape from a captive colony in what was probably a farm. By the 1940s these were believed to be fully naturalised and breeding; numbers declined, however, and the last confirmed sighting was in 1972. Its importance to wildlife is recognized by its designation as a Special Protection Area. These wallabies, added to the fact that Christopher Robin owned toy Kangaroos, may have been the reason for Kanga and Roo.

Hammerwood

Hammerwood is a small hamlet, four miles to the east of East Grinstead in Sussex, UK.

The name Hammerwood comes from the old Sussex iron industry and relates to the numerous hammer-ponds found in the area. Streams in the locality can still run red with the colour of iron in the water.

Aside from a number of houses, the most notable buildings are St. Stephen’s Church and Hammerwood House.

The church was completed in 1880 funded by local landowner Oswald Augustus Smith and built to a design of E.P Loftus Brock. Smith also funded the rebuilding of St Peter’s Church in Holtye within the same parish. The church can be found on the main road. Inside the church, there is a pipe organ built by T.C Lewis of Brixton in 1884. Both churches are regularly used and form the Parish of Hammerwood and Holtye, which itself forms a United Benefice with St Mary Magdalene in Cowden.

Hammerwood House was designed by the architect Benjamin Latrobe, also responsible for the Capitol in Washington. Hammerwood House is open to the public at certain times of the year.

Also at Hammerwood there is a Scout campsite which is used by the Lewisham North District Scouts. There are numerous camps and competitions for example the Stag trophy and ‘Operation Nighthawk’ are based at the camp site. Many of the clearings throughout the woodland are used for camping for various troops. Also there are several huts at the top of the campsite adjacent to the car park. Toilet blocks, and electricity are available at the main area around the huts.

Saint Hill

Saint Hill Manor

Saint Hill is a mansion near East Grinstead, Sussex, England and was for many years the head office of the Church of Scientology. It remains the head office for the church in the United Kingdom.

It is situated on 59 acres (239,000 m²) of landscaped gardens.

Saint Hill Manor was built by Gibbs Crawford in 1792. Other owners include Edgar March Crookshank and Mrs. Drexrel Biddle, who commissioned the famous Monkey Mural which was painted by John Spencer-Churchill, nephew of Winston Churchill.

L. Ron Hubbard, founder of Scientology, bought the mansion from the Maharajah of Jaipur in 1959 and lived there until 1966. Much of early Scientology was developed at Saint Hill, including a course known to Scientologists as the Saint Hill Special Briefing course. Hubbard also constructed Saint Hill Castle on the grounds outside the Manor.

Monkey Room
Monkey Room, Saint Hill

Sackville College

Sackville College

Sackville College is a Jacobean almshouse in town of East Grinstead, England. It was founded in 1609 with money left by Robert Sackville, the Earl of Dorset. Throughout its history has provided sheltered accommodation for the elderly. The College is a run as a charity and operates under an Act of Parliament from 1624 and a Royal Charter from 1631. The College continues to receive patronage from William Herbrand Sackville, 11th Earl De La Warr.

The building is located at the end of the High Street close to the church of St. Swithin’s. It is build of local sandstone. The main building was completed in 1619, and remains exceptionally well preserved. The original lock is still used on the chapel door and much furniture from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries is preserved inside. It is a Grade I listed building. The building surrounds a courtyard which contains a well. The internal walls have large mullioned windows. The Great Hall features the original hammer-beam room. Inside, the residences for the elderly have been modernized.

The College is run by a warden, who lives in part of the building that was originally used by the Sackville family on visits to their Sussex estates. The warden’s office has not changed substantially since it was used by the Revd. Dr. John Mason Neale who was warden from 1846 until his death in 1866. The Revd. Neale was a hymn writer notable for authoring Good King Wenceslas. The warden’s office is a good example of a Victorian study.

As the College remains in use much of it is not open to the public, however the chapel, Hall and warden’s office are open Wednesday to Sunday during the summer.

Queen Victoria Hospital

The Queen Victoria Hospital has become world famous for its pioneering burns and plastic surgery. Most famously, it was where the Guinea Pig Club was formed in 1941 after Sir Archibald McIndoe joined the hospital in 1939 to set up a special unit for the treatment of soldiers from the second world war to treat their facial and burns injuries.

The hospital is located in East Grinstead. The Princess Royal is the current patron of the hospital.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF ASHURST WOOD

Pre-History
The earliest fact known about Ashurst Wood is that Lewes Road - Hammerwood Road -Cansiron Lane has been a ridgeway track for animals and man for at least 5000 years.

Romans
The Romans left no visible remains in Ashurst Wood village, but there are many signs of the iron factory and tile works at the Holtye end of Cansiron Lane.

1066 and All That
By 1066 our area had been settled to the extent that we had a substantial farm group on either side of today’s village; Brambletye to the south with its demesne farm, one large farmer and many smallholders; Shovelstrode to the north with a demesne farm, one large farmer and three smallholders.

Elizabethan Era
An era known as the ‘Great Rebuilding’ began during the Elizabethan period. Many of the substantial properties built here during that time still remain, albeit in much modified form. These include Grove Farm, Pock Hill, Great Surries, Great and Little Cansiron, Little Beeches (now sub-divided), Little Water, Homestall (Button Hall now added from Cheshire) and several others.

Civil War
Just before the Civil War in 1631 Brambletye House was built, a truly great house by any standard. Unfortunately it did not survive the perils of Oliver Cromwell and his men and by the end of that century was a ruin as you see it today.

18th Century
By 1725 the Three Crowns Inn or Public House appears in the records, although we do not know its precise age.

Victorian Times
It is only in the Victorian era that signs of a village as we know it appeared. Apart from more house building, the village gained a church, a school and another pub.
The church we now know as St. Dunstan’s was originally built in 1859 as a Congregational church. The Church of England used the Mission Room built in 1884 (now a private dwelling) and only acquired the present building in 1977. It was rededicated in 1979.
The school opened in 1873 with 35 pupils and was situated in Hammerwood Road. Pupil numbers grew and in 1910 they moved to the site of the present school.
Records show that the recreation ground was used as a cricket ground as early as 1896, but football is not recorded until the I92o’s.

20th Century
In the 2Oth century we gained the W.I. (1917), a war memorial (1921), the Village Centre (1930) and many more houses. In 1970 John Pears Field was dedicated as a memorial and has become a source of much enjoyment.

Source: Village Action Plan Spring 2007

The bombing of East Grinstead on 9th July, 1943

On 9th July 1943, ten German aircraft crossed the Sussex coast at Hastings and headed for London. At 5.05 pm the air raid sirens sounded in East Grinstead. At the time 184 people were watching a film featuring Hopalong Cassidy in the Whitehall Cinema. A warning appeared on the screen that a German air raid was taking place but few of the audience, mostly children, took any notice of the message.

At 5.10 PM one pilot became separated from the other planes and decided that he would find another target before he returned home. A few minutes later he saw a train entering East Grinstead Station. He circled the town twice before dropping his bombs on the High Street.

One hit the Whitehall Cinema and others landed on several shops in the High Street and the London Road. As a result of the raid 108 people were killed and 235 were seriously injured. It was the largest loss of life in any air raid in Sussex.

Map East Grinstead WWII


Mrs. Pope lived in London Road, East Grinstead, during the raid. Her account appeared in the local newspaper a week after the incident.

I was standing in front of my door when the plane came over the house-tops. I saw the bombs drop and I shouted out, ‘he’s bombing the cinema’. Then there was an explosion and I saw the cinema had been hit. The plane went away, circled round the town and came back straight towards me. It opened up with its machine-guns. My husband fell flat on the garden path. Bullets went over his head and knocked chips off the opposite wall.

In 1945, T. P. Peters, an Air Raid Warden in East Grinstead, wrote about his experiences during the Second World War in his book, Reminiscences (1945).

I was in Norton House when the alert went. I said to Mr. Towler, Head Warden, ‘I will just check up on the shelters.’ I had just left the back of the Scotch Wool Shop and got to Bridgland’s when the bombs dropped. I was blown across the road into the building opposite. My mind soon cleared. I looked around - people were lying all round me terribly injured, blown from I do not know where. I was the only uninjured person present. Bullets were flying round as the raider had returned and was machine-gunning the town.

Mrs. C. Putterick was working at the East Grinstead Post Office during the raid. She was interviewed about her experiences in 1993.

We were working in the telephone exchange when the air raid warnings were given out. Scarcely had it been passed than we heard the sound of the plane diving down on us. There was a sound of an explosion, windows rattled and the whole room shook. Every light on the switchboard suddenly started flashing and it was impossible at that time to know exactly what had happened. We were scarcely able to breathe because of our anxiety.

East Grinstead Courier (16th July, 1943)

Death dealing blows were struck at the heart of a quiet South-East town soon after 5 o’clock on Friday, when one of about ten enemy raiders swept in from the coast to cause havoc in the shopping centre, and a large number of casualties among men, women and children. The majority of the casualties were in a cinema, where a bomb scored a direct hit. It was there that the death toll was heavy.

Within a few minutes of this ruthless attack on an open town, Civil Defence workers, including police and the N.F.S. as well as troops and members of the Home Guard, were on the scene effecting rescues. Members of the public also helped in the heroic task. The combined services accomplished many feats of skill and daring, and worked feverishly throughout the late afternoon and night.

There were many harrowing scenes as children and women were recovered from the debris. A newspaper office was used for a mortuary, and later the bodies were taken to a garage where they were left for identification purposes. Not half of the victims had been identified by Sunday.

The attack on this quiet little country town will long be remembered for the manner in which defenceless women and children were massacred, and the viciousness of the attack by the Nazi raider on a locality which had no military pretensions. The one high explosive which caused the greater number of casualties was that which penetrated the roof of the attractive cinema. It actually dropped among the cheaper seats, which were mainly occupied by women and children. The cinema, which had a seating accommodation for 400, was fairly full at the time. Most of the children in the audience had gone to the cinema straight from school, a regular Friday night ‘habit’ among them.

One by one, and two by two, pale faced and lifeless children were brought out of the ruins. Some were found almost naked with their clothes blasted from them. It was a sickening scene, one which brought tears even to the stoutest hearts among the gallant lot of rescuers who toiled on through the night.

One man was told it was time to rest. The rescuer looked up, inwardly moved, but not betraying a sign of emotion, replied: “No, I work on. Under this rubble is my wife. I must find her.” And so he went on toiling. Also under the brick and dust was a worker’s sister-in-law. He dug her out and went on looking for her child.

Load after load of broken glass was swept up by soldiers and other Civil Defence workers and carted away out of sight. By Saturday morning those hard workers had cleared much of the debris. And while many worked on to make the road less like a shambles, there were several shopkeepers who were actually doing business with customers on the pavements instead of their damaged shops. One young woman was taking orders for delivery of groceries that morning. The order included cheese and streaky bacon. This had to be served up from the bombed shop. In the afternoon there was a sad queuing up of relatives at the garage

John Parsons, aged 13, was in Whitehall Cinema during the air raid. He was interviewed about the raid in the local newspaper a week after the incident.

I went to the cinema straight after school with a friend. We saw the news and while a cowboy film was showing the bombs fell. I was sitting in the front row - in the ‘tenpennies’. The first thing I knew was a sort of crackling which ran along the ceiling. The exit lights and the film went out at the same moment and the place was in complete darkness. Bits of debris started flying about I got on the floor in less than a second. I crawled along in front of the seats, jumped up and ran to the exit. Just as I was going up the steps there was an explosion. Then I felt a pain in my face and found I had been cut. When I came out I heard machine-gun fire and I stepped back inside again. When the firing stopped I left the cinema.

East Grinstead Observer (17th July, 1943)

Late on Friday afternoon a small number of enemy aircraft crossed the Southeast Coast. Bombs were dropped at different places. Two enemy bombers were brought down - one near Caterham and one near Sittingbourne - and both exploded, the crews being killed. A county town in the Southeast area was attacked, and a cinema was hit, causing a large number of casualties, including many children.

Suddenly the roar of a plane approaching the town from the north was heard. It swooped down out of the low-lying clouds and it was then that shoppers and other people realised that the twin-engined bomber was a German. It roared over the town, circled twice and then dropped several bombs. One made a direct hit on a cinema, another on an ironmonger’s shop higher up the road, another on a builder’s and ladies’ outfitters and one fell near a factory.

In the cinema was an audience of 184 - the majority being children - who were trapped when the bomb fell. Following the
news came a cowboy film, during which the usual notice of an air raid being in progress was displayed, so that anybody who wished to leave might do so. Few people left, but among them was one schoolboy.

Suddenly there was a terrific crash, and to use the words of one survivor, the whole building seemed to collapse like a pack of cards, trapping most of the audience.

Molly Stiller, daughter of an officer in the Home Guard, was the only member of the cinema staff to be killed. She worked in the cinema as an usherette. Mr. Herbert Brackpool was busy in his bakehouse making jam tarts. Suddenly the roof split open and through the opening fell the bodies of four women. All four were dead. Mr. Brackpool, knowing that his son was at the cinema rushed to join the rescue workers. Presently one of Mr. Brackpool’s colleagues came across the boy’s dead body.

A little further up the road from the cinema, a large ironmonger’s shop received a direct hit and a fire spread rapidly. The company secretary had a miraculous escape. He was near the top of the building which was four stories high when he suddenly felt himself falling. He went through two floors before coming to a rest. He was able to cling to a ledge - behind him another room was blazing - until rescued by ladders.

The fire spread rapidly to the adjoining premises on the south-side, a cycle shop and the jeweller’s, which, like the ironmonger’s was gutted by nightfall. Further destruction was wrought in another street where some old buildings stood. A small millinery shop received a direct hit and collapsed killing the manageress. A builder’s premises next door was burnt to the ground and a ladies’ gown shop was wrecked. A number of members of staff were killed or injured.

Another bomb dropped to the rear of a stationer’s shop - one of the oldest buildings in the town. The proprietor and his wife have since died from their injuries.

The work of all branches of the Civil Defence was magnificent. Shortly after the bombs fell the N.F.S. were on the scene pumping water on the burning buildings. They managed to save a public house and a warehouse from total demolition and by nightfall they had the fires under control. Rescue squads, assisted by soldiers, members of the Home Guard, Special Police, and many ordinary citizens went straight to their task and worked grimly throughout the night. Mr. Frederick Whales, a railwayman who is also an air raid warden, unearthed the body of his niece, Molly Stiller.

E.G. Outsell, a sergeant of the special police, reported for duty despite the fact that he suffered injury by a machine-gun bullet. He was outside his shop when the plane machine-gunned the town and received a graze across his stomach from a bullet. After treatment he went on duty. Special Constable Golding was in a train that was machine-gunned and on his arrival home he found that his daughter had gone to the cinema for the first time for many months. Despite his great anxiety he reported for duty and later was relieved to hear that his daughter, except for cuts and bruises, was safe. Special Constable Prodger was on duty throughout the night knowing, too, that his daughter was in the cinema. She was among the killed.

Eric Parsons escaped from this ordeal because of his interest in rabbits. “I go to the cinema every Friday evening” he said. “This was the first Friday I have missed for months. Instead of spending my money on the pictures I saved it in order to enter my two rabbits in our school rabbit show.”

Robert Jack, an agricultural worker, was in Whitehall Cinema during the air raid. He was interviewed about the raid in the local newspaper a week after the incident.

I had been given permission to take the afternoon off after completing certain errands, and for want of something better to do I went to the cinema. I took a seat at the rear of the hall. I had missed the opening of the film and was wondering what the picture was all about when I heard the crash of a bomb which fell nearby. The audience became restive, though not in any way panicky, but the majority, including myself, decided things were getting a little hot and we got up from our seats. It was all very orderly and the gangways were filled with people making their way casually to the street. I suppose about half the audience were on their feet and half had decided to remain. I had just reached the door and had my hand on it when there was an awful crash and I had a glimpse of the whole cinema filled with smoke and flames. Then something hit me on the head. When I came to I was lying in a heap in a seat ten rows away from the door. My head was bleeding and I heard groans. I was able to drag myself away and collapsed in the arms of one of the rescue workers.

William Roy Henn, projectionist, Whitehall Cinema, interviewed in 1993.

It was a terrible, terrible day. The auditorium of the cinema was the most awful sight I ever wish to see. It is still as vivid in my mind as ever. You never forget something like that Everything was on the move, walls were collapsing around me. I remember standing there shaking myself and wondering what was happening. I was completely blinded by dust but I could hear screams coming from the audience. People were crying and moans were coming from beneath the debris right under your feet. Bullets were ricocheting off the walls around me like something out of a Western film. I took cover in a hairdresser’s shop and flung myself to the floor. The main shopping area along London Road was like a battlefield, half a dozen bodies were lying in the road.

My childhood memories:-
I was about 9 years old, when, in East Grinstead, a Bomb was dropped on the Cinema, and the film that was being shown was “Random Harvest”. A carnage ensued.I sat with Granny, watching the bodies being taken to the mortuary and the little church next to the cemetery.
We used to run under the stairs to shelter from the Doodlebugs. When at School, and the Siren went, we had to go to the Shelters, where we sang songs like “Mares eat Oats”.
One Bomb went into the chicken run and the chickens escaped into the old ladies’ home!
I also remember the V.E.Day parties. - © Patricia Owen

Chronology of events in East Grinstead on 9th July, 1943.

4.00: Children leave East Grinstead Secondary School. Some of the children go to the Whitehall Cinema.

5.00: Ten German bombers approach Sussex coast. R.A.F. send up 16 fighters to intercept them.

5.05: Air Raid Sirens sounded in East Grinstead. Air Raid warnings flashed on the screen of the Whitehall Cinema. Tom Peters, Air Raid Warden, leaves Norton House in London Road to inspect shelters.

5.10: One of the German bombers becomes separated from the other nine planes. Flies at low level over Coleman’s Hatch.

5.14: German bomber machine-guns a train just outside East Grinstead.

5.16: German bomber at 100 feet over East Grinstead.

5.17: German plane drops: (1) 500k bomb on Whitehall Cinema: blast damages Sainsbury Grocery Store; (2) 50k bomb on Bridgland’s Ironmongers; (3) 50k bomb on Rice Brothers; (4) 500k by the side of Methodist Church; (5) 50k bomb on Brooker Brothers; (6) 500k bomb on Tooths Stationers; (7) 50k bomb at the back of National Provincial Bank

5.18: German plane machine-guns people in Queen’s Road, Railway Approach and London Road.

5.19: Fire Brigade informed of fires at Brooker Brothers and Bridglands. A.R.P. and local people arrive at the cinema to help rescue the people inside.

5.25: First ambulances arrive and start taking injured and dead to Queen Victoria Hospital.

5.30: Canadian troops arrive to help rescue the people inside the Whitehall Cinema. 12 ambulances arrive from Forest Row.

5.48: ‘All Clear’ sounds. Raging fires at Brooker Brothers, Pauline’s Gowns, Bridglands, Rice Brothers, Hobson Wright, Cruttenden and Stage Stores. Fire Brigade draws water from Moat Pond.

6.15: Forster’s Garage in London Road taken over as a temporary mortuary.

7.10: Last of the live casualties brought out of the Whitehall Cinema.

7.30: All fires in East Grinstead under control.

Parts of this page are from: The People’s War by Angus Calder