Total Pageviews

Showing posts with label First World War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First World War. Show all posts

Monday, 23 January 2017

Centenary of the Silvertown Explosion

This month is the centenary of the Silvertown explosion which provides a dramatic opening to my latest Kirsty Campbell mystery, Devil’s Porridge. In this book, I have mixed fact and fiction to fashion a story guaranteed to keep readers turning the pages.


On Friday 19th January 1917, at 6.52 pm, a massive explosion destroyed the Brunner-Mond munitions factory and destroyed most of Silvertown. This explosion has been described as the biggest explosion ever to have taken place in London.

Silvertown, in the east end of London, was an industrial area on the north bank of the River Thames, opposite the Greenwich Peninsula, and south of the Victoria Docks.

The Brunner-Mond factory at Silvertown was an old established chemical works which had been adapted, at the start of the First World War, to manufacture TNT (trinitrotoluene) a highly explosive substance.

The explosion occurred after a fire broke out in the melt room shortly after the workers had finished work for the weekend. It destroyed the factory and obliterated a large part of Silvertown. It is recorded that the sound of the blast could be heard as far away as Sussex, and red-hot lumps of metal rained down on other areas, starting fires wherever they landed. A gas holder, across the river on the Greenwich Peninsula, was hit and shot 8 million cubic feet of gas into the sky in a massive fireball. This gas holder was in the area now occupied by the Millennium Dome.

A local reporter, writing in the Stratford Express, wrote: “The whole heavens were lit in awful splendour. A fiery glow seemed to have come over the dark and miserable January evening, and objects which a few minutes before had been blotted out in the intense darkness were silhouetted against the sky.”


It is estimated that between 60,000 to 70,000 properties were damaged, 73 people were killed, and over 400 were injured. The toll would have been even greater had the explosion occurred during working hours.

Rumours were rife about the cause of the explosion. Some thought it was a Zeppelin attack, some said it was sabotage, but these were ruled out and the cause was confirmed as an accident.

But, of course, an accident doesn’t make for gripping fiction, and Devil’s Porridge is not a history book, it’s a murder mystery story. One of the knacks of writing historical fiction is the ability to blend facts into the fiction, perhaps twisting them a little, without distorting the historical reality. So, in Devil’s Porridge, the explosion is the result of sabotage with a murder thrown in for good measure.

Similarly, I touch on other historical facts for the back story, like the invasion of Belgium by the Germans in 1914, the German spy network operating from Rotterdam, MI5, King George and Queen Mary’s visit to Gretna in 1917, the Easter Rising in Ireland, and the imprisonment and ultimate release of the Irish revolutionaries from Frongoch. And, of course, Kirsty Campbell is one of the pioneering policewomen of the time.

I enjoyed the historical research for this book and although fictional elements have been woven into the facts, for example, there was no assassination attempt on the King, at least as far as the history books tell us, I trust this will not spoil the story for the historians amongst my readers.


Chris Longmuir



Sunday, 3 August 2014

First World War, Ghosts, and Aeroplanes

John Binnie and Betty Doe

Montrose Air Station is commemorating the centennial of the First World War with an open day, and the launch of a new play, Falls the Shadow, by Betty Doe. When I say it is a new play, that is because it has been expanded from the one act play she wrote last year, and which was performed at the air station in front of Prince Edward, the Earl of Wessex, who was in the audience.
 
The Red Baron's plane


Nowadays, Montrose Air Station is a museum which features many exhibits from the first and Second World Wars, including several vintage aeroplanes, and it even has one which was originally flown by the Red Baron. Now, don’t tell me you don’t know who the Red Baron was? Well, just in case you don’t know, and apologies to those who do, the Red Baron was the German ace pilot, Manfred von Richthofen, who shot down more aircraft than any other pilot during the course of the war. Oh, and let’s not forget the ghost! Over the years many ghostly happenings have occurred at Montrose Air Station, and it is thought the ghost is LT Desmond Arthur who was killed in 1913, when his biplane crashed on a training flight.
 
The ghost, Lt Desmond Arthur, played by Stephen Docherty

Betty Doe’s play, Falls the Shadow, was performed in one of the large hangers on the site. It was directed by John Binnie, a well known writer/director whose productions have won three Edinburgh Fringe First awards, and was performed by professional actors. The result was a professional, polished play which was enjoyed by a multi-national audience.
 
Cast of the play with World War 2 pilots to the left and World War 1 pilots with Major Burke to the right.

The actors performed scenes set during both the first and second world wars, overseen by the ghost of Desmond Arthur, who was joined at the end by the ghost of Major Burke who led the Montrose based No 2 Squadron of the Flying Corps to France in 1914. He was killed in action in 1917. There were some highly emotional scenes, and the play really brought it home to the audience what conditions were like, particularly during the First World War, when the life expectancy of pilots was six weeks.

I can only congratulate Betty Doe on writing such an emotive play, the actors for their superb performance, and John Binnie for a professional production.

Scenes from the play:
First World War pilots playing chess before flying into battle, with the ghost of Desmond Arthur looking on.
Second World War pilots playing cards prior to flying into battle
The ghosts of Lt Desmond Arthur and Major Charles Burke
The ghosts again
Playwright Betty Doe with the ghosts of Lt Desmond Arthur and Major Charles Burke


Chris Longmuir