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Bath unexploded bomb: Hundreds face 48-hour evacuation as device found at school | |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Hundreds of residents may spend another night away from their homes after an unexploded wartime device was found in a school playground. | |
A 300-metre exclusion zone was set up following the discovery at the Royal High School Bath - which Mary Berry attended - on Lansdown Road, Bath at 4.40pm on Thursday. | |
Contractors unearthed the 500lb Second World War shell from beneath the surface of the school's playground, which had been in use until two years ago. | |
An Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team was called to the site and residents from 1,100 properties nearby were advised to leave immediately. | |
Three primary schools were closed, along with a doctor's surgery, and drivers were asked to consider if it was "absolutely necessary" for them to travel into the city. | |
Some residents chose to stay in their homes against the advice of police, but others were taken to Bath Racecourse, the city's Guildhall and Pavilion. | |
A group of elderly residents spent the night sleeping on chairs they pulled together in a hospitality suite at the racecourse. | |
Jan Lawrence, 67, a retired lab technician and her husband Bob, 70, a retired civil servant, were evacuated from their home by police at 9pm on Thursday. | |
"We had gone to the pub because they do a nice curry on a Thursday night," Mrs Lawrence said. "We walked up the hill and the police wouldn't let us go any further, they wouldn't say why. | |
"We had to come up the back way, that was about 8pm. I just got my dressing gown on and there was a loud knock at the door, it was the police. | |
"It was 9pm and they said we had to go. We came up here and have been here ever since." | |
Mrs Lawrence and her husband live in old almshouses, built in the 1800s, on St Stephen's Place. | |
"I had just thrown my clothes into the washing basket but we had to go so I just grabbed them, there wasn't time to get anything else," she added. | |
Mr Lawrence, who served with the Royal Army Medical Corps before joining the civil service, said: "They say it could be some time. | |
"We're on the edge of the exclusion zone so hopefully they will let us back in soon. We just want to go home." | |
Harriet Gillingham, 20, a student at Oxford Brookes University, spent the night at a friend's house with her four-year-old cockerpoo dog named Pepper. | |
"I wasn't at home, I got back at about 9pm and there were policemen everywhere saying we couldn't go in," she said. | |
"I was with a friend so we went to her house. I went back at nine this morning and a policeman said it had become unstable and could go off. | |
"My house is just two streets down, it must be 100 metres away. It is quite scary but I don't think it will go off. I hope it won't anyway." | |
The EOD team are currently building a barrier around the device using 250 tonnes of sand. | |
Once this is in place, they will remove the device with a police escort to a safe location away from the Bath area, where they will carry out a controlled explosion. | |
A number of residents have chosen to remain in their homes and have been instructed to stay inside. | |
"Some people elected not to come," Mrs Lawrence added. "I wish I had in a way." | |
One elderly resident, who asked not to be named, said: "We slept in the hospitality suite last night. We pulled six chairs together and made a couple of beds. We were able to get a reasonable amount of sleep. You get very resourceful when you have to. There were fleece blankets too." | |
The resident, who has lived near the bomb for 40 years, lived in Wales during the war so did not witness the Bath Blitz of April 1942. | |
More than 400 people were killed and 1,000 injured when Nazi aircraft dropped bombs over two days - affecting almost 20,000 buildings. | |
"We were very fortunate we didn't have bombs but we did have one landmine," she said. | |
"We are all concerned about this bomb that they found here now because you can get blast damage from an explosion. | |
"When the landmine went off it caused a lot of glass to break in nearby shops, flying glass can do a great deal of damage. | |
"We have been imagining those poor children running around in the playground with an unexploded bomb underneath them." |
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