12 December 2025

Zeppelin

Stealthily and slowly the zeppelin moved across that summer sky, sometimes appearing briefly and largely unnoticed in the gaps between evening clouds. In those days, military airship navigation was a rather crude process and the given targets were therefore quite general. It was August 9th 1915 and The Great War had, like my father, just passed its first birthday. The huge L9 aircraft, manufactured in Friedrichshafen, Germany was commanded by Kapitänleutnant Odo Loewe.   

Ahead was the little Yorkshire port town of Goole.  With its first few bombs, the enemy attempted to blow up Goole Railway Bridge where it crosses The River Ouse. They failed miserably before drifting on to the town itself.
Goole Railway Bridge on Wednesday

In the little terraced streets north east of the docks, citizens were getting ready for bed. No doubt some were mending shoes, ironing clothes, playing dominoes, reading books, eating supper, stoking fires or settling children. Goole had never been bombed before and the people were blissfully unprepared for what was about to happen.

In total, sixty bombs were dropped on the town that night. It was like winning a reverse lottery. Roofs and walls came down. Fires erupted. Screams were heard and in the neighbourhood of Aire Street and Bridge Street, it was as if hell had broken out. The zeppelin drifted serenely on to the docks where minimal damage was caused before turning back to The North Sea and Germany beyond. The last few bombs were dropped in fields near the village of Hotham in The East Riding.

Behind lay the innocent dead, dying and injured - victims of a war that they neither created nor understood. Isn't that characteristic of all wars? 

Those who died that night were: Sarah Acaster, 65; Sarah Ann Acaster, 34; Kezia Acaster, 32; Violet Stainton, 18; Hannah Goodall, 74; Alice Harrison, six; Florence Harrison, four; Margaret Selina Pratt, nine months; Agnes Pratt, 36; Alice Elizabeth Woodhall, three; Grace Woodhall, 31; Mary Carroll, 32; James Carroll, 26; Alice Carroll, four; Gladys Mary Carroll, three, and Alice Smith, 17.

As I was walking in and around Goole on Wednesday, I looped round the cemetery and saw this, though at that precise moment I had no idea what it was:-
It is a memorial to the unfortunates listed above. Here's a close-up:-
The second photo is from the Historic England website.

My morning research into this tragedy conjured up an evocative  letter dated August 12th 1915 and written by Mr West, a resident of Goole, to his daughter who was a student in Leeds at the time - training to be a teacher:-
Mr Gunnee carried girl out, all flesh of one leg torn away - next he fetched a young baby, but the sight finished him; he was done ... sick ... he went away ... to vomit. Had it been a man, he says he would not care. Next fell in Ouse Street (back) near T.K. Wilson's baker. Hole in wall, drive horse and car thro' - floors are all down in the cellar, furniture just a pile of ruin, pictures hang akimbo.

Let us pray especially for the children whose lives had only just begun - Violet, Florence, Grace, Gladys, the four Alices and last but not least Baby Margaret. It goes without saying that they did not deserve to die that night.

As for Kapitänleutnant Odo Loewe, six months later in January 1916, he was commanding another zeppelin - the L19. It had to be ditched in the middle of The North Sea but all of the crew survived in a life raft.  Their signal flares were spotted by a passing  Grimsby fishing trawler but when the skipper of that boat, William Martin, realised that all of those seeking rescue were German airmen, he refused to pick them up, fearing they might take over his vessel. Subsequently, all sixteen, including  Loewe,  drowned. Perhaps it was predestined that that number precisely matched the tally of death in Goole.

30 comments:

  1. Odo Loewe. Kapitanleutnant. 1915.
    A name unknown to me until I read your post.
    Len Deighton's *Airshipwreck* is the only book I possess on dirigibles.
    Hermione Lee criticised Deighton on Channel 4 for not being anti-war enough.
    ( *Low-key, nervy, raw : Birth of a Channel.* The Guardian online 2007. )

    The granite book listing the names of the dead is daunting.
    And the names of all the children including baby Margaret and the four Alices.
    Children and their mothers are the first casualties of war. They die in agony.
    Sir Tony Blair (worth £375 million) learned it too late.

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    Replies
    1. I never knew that Tony Blair was worth that much. He was meant to be a Labour man. Perhaps he was only jossing. He still refuses to admit that he made a terrible mistake over Iraq. He should have listened to his people instead of the dumb teddy bear they called Dubya. I would love to arm wrestle Tony Blair. It would not take long to beat him.

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    2. £375 million may not include his properties.
      Sir Tony or Charles Lynton as he called himself when he appeared before the
      Bow Street Magistrates' Court in the 1980s, has his own Money Supermarket.

      *Exposed : Tony Blair and Israel's Favourite Billionaire.*
      YouTube. Double Down News.

      Delete
    3. I think the Charles Lyndon story is another one of those internet myths that people have fallen for. happy to be proven wrong if you can direct me to a credible source that confirms it.

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    4. Well, I had never heard this story before. I might have guessed that Charles Lyndon was a country vicar in a novel by Jane Austen.

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    5. Journalists in London regard the Charles Lyndon story as an open secret.
      It would have been all too easy to disprove.
      Who cares ? Better if he had been a frock in the Vatican, that den of vipers.

      *Kidnapped from the Vatican : The Emanuela Orlandi Story.* YouTube.
      *Tony Blair is one of the most dangerous men in British history : Ben Habib.*
      YouTube. Winston Marshall Clips.

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  2. How terribly sad.

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  3. Wars always seem to be started by old men, fought by young men, and yet children always die.

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    Replies
    1. The young men do their duty even though they may not understand exactly why they are fighting. 56,638 Canadians died in World War One and 45,400 in World War Two.

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  4. A sad post YP, wars and bombs and death are all sad things especially when children and babies are involved.

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    Replies
    1. The people who die in wars never create them.

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  5. I find this interesting and heart breaking in equal measure.
    There is a village in France that we visited many years ago, called Oradour Sur Glane. It is frozen in time. Theres plenty of information online about it. Such atrocities and still humans learn nothing.
    It's all terribly sad.

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    Replies
    1. I have heard of that place Christina but I have never been there.

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  6. Tragic, and it just goes on and on, with lessons never learnt.

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    Replies
    1. See. You are right about some things Andrew.

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  7. If only mankind has learnt from this. Unfortunately man’s capacity to learn in this regard is rather limited.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The lessons are swept under the carpet of memory.

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  8. Replies
    1. Most of my relatives are in there, as will I,

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  9. War is so futile and we never learn. I fear that a world war now would be on a much different scale with modern techniques. All very scary at the moment.

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    Replies
    1. Perhaps what has been happening in Ukraine is simply the hors d'oeuvre before the main course.

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  10. If you want to ride in a Zeppelin, https://zeppelinflug.de/en. It is an amazing experience.

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  11. Like so many others here, I despair at how we never seem to learn to do better.
    That the number of drowned Zeppelin crew exactly matches the number of victims in Goole is a strange coincidence.

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  12. War is hell.

    I was fascinated by zeppelins and blimps when I was a kid, and was disappointed to learn later that they weren't just cool flying machines for passengers, but bringers of death and destruction in wartime.

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  13. War. So useless, and without real reason.

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  14. Such a sad story. This is the reason we must never let our children and grandchildren forget these stories.

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  15. War is a cruel mistress.

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