91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Event    From 10/5/1941  To 11/5/1941

Old Bailey WW2 bomb

Categories: Property

Old Bailey WW2 bomb

A bomb landed on the Old Bailey on 10/11 May 1941 destroying the north-west corner. The mural shows the damaged building, which is also recorded in this photograph held by the Science Museum Group Collection © The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum.

It's interesting to compare the two images. Moira, the artist, has show the Old Bailey's damage to be even worse than it was. And he's shown St Pauls in the background, correctly positioned, but we doubt it would have been possible to see it from the viewpoint of a person standing at street level.

Despite this damage administration of justice within the Old Bailey continued. The restored north-west corner was opened on the 14th October 1952.

Harry Dart and Harold Sheehy were members of staff who lost their lives in this bomb attack.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Old Bailey WW2 bomb

Commemorated ati

Old Bailey - WW2 mural

{Below the mural:} 1939 - 1945 {Lower right:} G. Moira

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Old Bailey - WW2 plaque

The Latin is a very appropriate legal phrase, meaning "Let justice be done th...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Lytham House

Lytham House

In 1852 Richard Ansdell, then resident in Victoria Road, built a second studio in St. Alban's Grove (to the west of LeGrew's which was opposite number 3) and repaired an old cottage adjacent.  In a...

Building, Property

1 memorial
A. R. Mason

A. R. Mason

Surveyor of St Dunstans Stepney, 1844. Nominative determinism rules - see Isambard Brunel for more examples.

Person, Property

1 memorial
The Retreat, Peak Hill, Sydenham

The Retreat, Peak Hill, Sydenham

George Baxter's wife was living here in 1865 when he joined her and stayed until his death here in 1867.  By 1894 it had been renamed Leahurst.

Building, Property

1 memorial
Kingswood House

Kingswood House

A Grade II listed building formerly known as Kings Coppice. It may have taken its name from Edward King who was a tenant of Dulwich manor in the sixteenth century. Between 1811 and 1814, William Vi...

Building, Community / Clubs, Property

1 memorial