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230142 raid

While convoys of lorries were still trucking the wreckage and rubble from the scene of devastation that became known as "The Waller's raid" in London Road North, Lowestoft, another deadly raid occurred. An alert had been sounded at 8.41 am, probably caused by German bombers seeking a convoy in the North Sea.
Barely a minute had elapsed after the warning when a lone bomber, variously identified as as a Do 217 or Ju 88 emerged from the snow clouds overhead and dived towards the railway station from the NE. From 500 feet four HE bombs were released before the attacking aircraft disappeared as quickly as it had come.
The first bomb landed at the junction of Till Road and Summer Road, bursting a 4 inch water main and killing two people, and the second fell in a garden in Stanley Street. As with the "Waller's raid" the bombs were dropped low and fell close together. The two remaining bombs hit Nos 46 and 55 Stanley Street, and the destruction caused by the cluster of bombs was equally devastating - 21 houses were completely demolished, 15 very severely damaged, 13 extensively damaged and about 100 slightly damaged.
The late Jack Rose always related the story about how Civil Defence Rescue Party teams rushing to the scene were confronted with the awful sight of a coffin containing a deceased person lying in the road. It had apparently been blasted there from one of the wrecked houses. The funeral was to have taken place that day and some would-be mourners were among the victims of the raid.
The precise number of dead in this raid has also been difficult to determine. Police reports indicate 12 killed, with another published source giving 15. Thus far we have identified 11 civilians in the IWGC Roll of Honour who died in Lowestoft that date.
What is not in dispute is the fact that only ten days after the horror of the "Waller's raid" another dreadful tragedy had struck the town and brought more suffering, more sadness and yet more misery to a town then entering its third year of war and with little respite in sight.
Lest we forget CREDIT: Bob Collis                                                                          
                                                                                                
Pictures Ford Jenkins and Bert Collyer collection

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A Civilian, James died on 23rd of January 1942 aged 35. James was born at Lowestoft on 22 October 1906, a son of Donald and Lily Guthrie. In 1911 his family lived at 8 Burton Street. By 1921 James lived at 5 Hope Terrace, Kessingland, and James was an apprentice monumental sculptor working for his father. In 1939 James lived with his family at Red Bungalow, Kessingland Beach, and James was a monumental sculptor. Later his parents lived at Xantho, Green Lane, Kessingland. James died at Stanley Street during an air raid. 230142 raid