While looking for interesting stuff for the weekly pictures from the past feature, I happened upon a wonderful selection of pictures taken in or around Cannock Chase during either the Great War or Second World War. The Chase back then bore little relationship to the site of outstanding national beauty we know today; it was far less wooded and more scrub, for it wasn’t until after the last war that the Forestry Commission was formed to revive our hitherto abused and lost woodlands. Being as it was – pretty much unfarmable wasteland – the Chase was heavily used by the military during both conflicts. Many know of the POW camp at Brocton, and of RAF Hednesford, but these pictures tell a story of a lost, perhaps less formal history. All come from the book ‘Cannock Chase: The Second Selection’ by June Pickerill. It’s a wonderful work, please buy a copy if you can.
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Have you seen this website Bob plenty of info on the Brocton Camp and Rugeley Camp
http://www.staffspasttrack.org.uk/exhibit/chasecamps/broctonzoom2.htm
You probably know this already, but the re. the YMCA hut – throughout both First and Second World Wars the YMCA supported soldiers, sailers, airmen and their families on the front lines and back home. This included huts at transit and training camps, for deployment and on the front line. They provided similar services to the NAAFI (selling tea, cake, biscuits etc) but also provided free writing paper, entertainment (eg. concerts, piano), education (lectures, libraries) and also free services to walking wounded after going over the top.
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i have just found out my grandad moved to stafford to test tanks in ww2 times for english electric, thanks for the information
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I am studying an old war record for a Scottish regiment which includes Normandy and Belguim and also the POW camp at Cannock. Was there an incident of prisoners being executed which included Dutch which came in after years 1970’s to the Hague for trial?