molly wrote:Crikey Suff, scary .
I also came close to a bomb in London. I was on a bus going along Kensington High Street when I heard it go off. It had been left in the Saxone shoe shop doorway in Kensington Church Street and a bomb disposal man, Roger Goad (I don't think I will ever forget that name) was killed whilst trying to defuse it.
To add: I have just looked looked Roger Goad up, it was August 1975 and he was awarded the George Cross posthumously for his bravery.
Mrs O was teaching at the Royal School for Deaf Children near Five Ways, Birmingham when an IRA bomb exploded about 200 yards away from the school in Calthorpe Road. Captain Ronald Wilkinson of the Bomb Disposal Squad was killed in the blast (this was 17/09/73). She told me that the bang was so loud that some of the profoundly deaf children actually "heard" it via the soundwaves - it was the first time they had experienced sound and some burst into tears.
21/11/74, I phoned a mate up and asked him if he wanted to go into Birmingham for a drink. "Nah, Ossie", he said "I want to watch Mastermind. We'll go have a drink locally afterwards." So a couple of hours later, we were sitting inside a pub on the Hagley Road wondering what on earth all the emergency vehicles were doing speeding towards the city. It was the Birmingham Pub Bombings. If we had gone into town, we would have been in either the Mulberry Bush under the Rotunda (used by British Railways staff, my mate worked for them) or the Tavern In The Town round the corner (young folks' pub). These were the two that were bombed.
My S. was a police cadet at the time. There were other bombs planted that night that did not go off. That night, she was put on duty in the aftermath of the atrocity at Five Ways roundabout, turning general traffic away from the city; there was an unexploded bomb in the petrol station nearby ....
As Di said earlier, the 70's were violent times, but we were young and we just got on with life.
To end on a slightly lighter note, in the following days, she and other cadets were put in charge of the room at the local police training centre where all "suspicious packages" subsequently found were taken (for lack of anything better to do with them). She always said the room was deathly quiet - if anything had started ticking, they'd have run like Hell .....