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During World War Two Hazelwood Road was in Group E35 in the
Acocks Green Sub-Division of the ARP. This is a transcription
of a report by Mr A.G. Whild, the Group Warden, kindly supplied
by John Purser of the Birmingham Air Raids Remembrance Association:
The following incidents occurred on this Group E35 during
the Air Raid of 24 - 25 Aug [1940]
Three unexploded bombs were discovered in Hazlewood Road
(two on Tennis Court adjoining House no 61 Hazlewood Rd and one
at the side of House no 61 and next to 59). These were reported
to Report Centre and action taken. After Raiders Passed Signal
was sounded I proceeded to the scene of the incident and found
the police upon the job. Upon instruction from the senior police
officer I gave order to Wardens to evacuate the occupants of houses
for a distance of one hundred yards in each direction and at 0635
dismissed wardens on duty upon the Instruction of the Incident
Officer. At approx 1100 the first bomb exploded and I was informed
that the Military Officer was injured in the course of examining
this bomb.
At approx 1435 the bomb which was between houses no 61 -
59 exploded and demolished these two houses and left house no
57 in a state of collapse. I proceeded to the incident and after
a brief survey sent a messenger to report the fact to Report Centre
and called for Gas and Water Services as gas and water mains were
suspected fractured. After this the scene was visited by the Divisional
Warden and later by the Chairman of the A.R.P. Committee Mr Tiptaft.
The third bomb has up to the present failed to explode (Time
1830 - 27/8/40)
According to Mr Robbins of number 6, recorded in 1977 for a
Charles Parker project on the history of Acocks Green, all that
was left of number 59 was the bath and a downpipe. The third bomb
mentioned above did not explode, but it kept sinking into the
soft ground, and houses a hundred yards either side were evacuated
for about a month until it had been dealt with.
A planning application was filed on December 3rd 1946 to rebuild
number 61. Interestingly further applications were filed in 1950
and the spring of 1952 by the prewar owner. All of the house apart
from the double garages on the left needed rebuilding, and the
1952 amended plan allowed for a pitched roof over the left side
of the house. The rear was also extended outwards a bit and the
back room and small kitchen were rebuilt as one, with a new kitchen
nearby. J.W. Gethin, who owned a Rover dealership on the Warwick
Road, and his wife Irene, who were listed at number 51 from 1947,
moved into the rebuilt number 61 by 1953. An unexploded bomb was
found under the drive around 1960, when work was being done, and
the Bomb Disposal squad had to be called in. Mr Gethin died in
January 1968, shortly before the Green Acres redevelopment.
A planning application to rebuild number 59 was submitted on
21st August 1950. The house had to be totally rebuilt. The result
is not an exact mirror image of number 57, which was only damaged.
The photograph below shows the difference in appearance of the
half-timbering of 59 on the left and 57 on the right.
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