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War epic screenings at Palace Theatre

 

Palace Theatre,Mill Street, Luton

Still one of the all-time biggest cinema box office crowd-pullers in Britain, the ground-breaking film The Battle of the Somme was to be shown to Luton audiences for the first time during a week-long run beginning on Monday, October 2nd, 1916, at the Palace Cinema in Mill Street. More than 20 million people nationwide would see the film at their local picture palaces.

Airship bomb crater at Luton Hoo park

 

Bomb crater in Hoo park

This was a crater left when an airship dropped a bomb in the grounds of Luton Hoo on September 24th, 1916. Bombs were also dropped at Dunstable, Kensworth and Leighton Buzzard around the same time, but nobody was hurt and the sum total of damage was a few smashed window panes.

The Hoo event wasn't reported at the time, but 20 years later to the day the Luton News recalled it and other Zeppelin incidents locally.

Diary: Deserted to the enemy?

 

Stories from the Beds & Herts Saturday Telegraph: September 23rd, 1916.

At the meeting of the Luton Board of Guardians on Monday application was made for relief for the wife of a soldier. She sent documentary evidence that he allowance had been stopped and the reason given was that her husband had "deserted to the enemy".

Child is Luton's first tramway fatality

 

The usually quiet neighbourhood of Ashton Road was on Saturday afternoon [September 23rd, 1916] the scene of the first fatal accident in which the Luton Tramways have been concerned since the inauguration of the service some eight years ago.

It involved the death from injuries within a few minutes of a little girl named Winifred May Dickens, aged two and a half years, whose father (Pte F. W. Dickens) is serving with the 1/5th Bedfordshire Regiment in Egypt.

Mayor's 'missing' son in hospital

 

Second-Lieut John Wilfrid Staddon, born March 20th, 1889, and eldest son of Luton Mayor and Mayoress Alderman and Mrs James Staddon, was reported missing, believed killed in action on the Somme on September 15th, 1916. But on September 22nd a field-postcard arrived from him to say he was wounded and in a base hospital in France and "going on well".

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