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®©WWII Ammunition Storage or Dispersal Site in Bures Hamlet officially known as a Forward Ammunition Depot (FAD) |
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Since
investigating the village past, by far the most interesting aspect has
been the discovery of a vast war time ammunition dump in and around
Bures Hamlet. During
the Second World War, large quantities of munitions were produced and
imported and needed to be stored prior to use. In order to prevent large
ammunition dumps on airfields being destroyed by Luftwaffe bombing,
they needed to be stored well away from these targeted areas. To this
end, certain stretches of road were commandeered by the military for
use as storage depots. The USAAF
commandeered a vast acreage of land which stretched from Bakers Hall
across the countryside to Countess Cross near to Pebmarsh and down to
Wakes Colne. However,
Essex County Council records show the area around Bakers Hall farm as
"Wakes Colne RAF Station" Very few remains are visible today, but hopefully after extensive research the following information will shed some light on this extraordinary site. This area could well have been the largest ammunition dump in the country that utilised normal public roads Bures was not entirely
unique, records indicate there were three Forward Ammunition Depots(FAD`s)
in East Anglia, namely:- This event goes back to 1942, when Eric Doe (Farmer) at Pricketts Hall distinctly remembers the arrival of a large American staff car laden with `top brass` parking near to the farm. They wandered around the area, taking a particular interest in a large wood at Butlers Farm, which stood there at the time. Locally known as Nurses Wood, this was felled shortly after the war ended. Was this going to mean another airfield ? It became clearer later, Bures Hamlet was to be the site for a Munitions Dispersal Site. The wood at Butlers Farm was especially useful for the storage of incendiary bombs away from the prying eyes of the German Luftwaffe. The
west of the village, fulfilled the requirements of the military in that: The `Dispersal Site` was primarily
used to supply local airfields. Bombs would have been delivered to such
an airfield as Earls Colne(B), whils`t machine gun ammunition would
have gone to fighter stations like Wormingford. Records indicate the
`Dispersal Site` serviced all of the airfields in Essex as well those
in the South of Suffolk. The movement of munitions to supply these bases must have been on a vast scale, it would have been a 24 hour a day operation.
Bombs arrived at Earls Colne or White Colne railway stations, where they were offloaded and transported to the dispersal site. The Earls Colne road was especially busy with transporters delivering munitions from the railway station whils`t others, were loading up ready for delivery back to the airfield. The USAAF used 6 wheel GMC open lorries
with a canopy for transport. The network of roads were constructed by a large number of negro USAAF servicemen. Local residents can still recall how they were made to work outside under atrocious conditions, with little consideration given to their welfare. The walls along the side of the road
were pushed over into the ditch to produce small areas of hard standing
along the verges approximately 50-100 yards apart for use as storage
bays. In other places the ditch was filled in with rubble.
Munitions of all kinds
were then transported along the roads and stacked on the areas of hard
standing, A local resident, recalls the Germans dropping an incendiary device, west of the searchlight along Colne Rd. Difficult to know if the enemy was trying to locate the searchlight position or the munition dumps. Fortunately, the incendiary fell on the wrong side of the road, any nearer to the village and the dispersal site would have been lit up for all to see. On another occasion a V1 rocket fell on farmland between Bakers Hall and the railway line, breaking numerous windows. Gordon Webber recalls on that evening, one almighty bang as the rocket plummeted into the ground opposite Bakers Hall where he lived. With the family safely tucked away he ventured outside to see smoke and flames pouring out of the crater. The American soldier who was in the guard post on the corner, was lying flat on the floor and muttered something like "Gee, what was that?" Many people think that living in the countryside was well away from the war, but in fact an area housing thousand of bombs had its own worries. Many a night a "doodlebug" could be heard with its familiar drone flying over the village. It was quite a relief to hear it disappear into the distance and not cut out directly above the dispersal site.
Even after the war ended, bombs were still in place some three years later. According to a staff member at White Colne station they were loaded back into wagons and transported to docks such as Harwich. Here they were loaded onto ships and finally dumped out to sea. Another resident at Earls Colne informed me the bombs were taken over to Ridgewell airfield where they were stored until the early 1950`s. They were then taken to Gt Yeldham railway station by 10ton lorries for transportation. I can only assume to docks such as Harwich. Acknowledgment
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