would someone that was killed in world war 2 have had a death certificate?
my grand father worked for charles richard fairey designer of the swordfish planes, in september 1940 while on firewatch my grandfather was ''blown up'' by land mine.
another mystery is why would there have been land mines in a little village called iver in buckinghamshire?
concidering the cause of death, if a death certificate was issued would there have been an inquest?
many thanks
sue
Results 1 to 10 of 15
Thread: death certificate
-
27-10-2008, 7:24 AM #1iverladyGuest
death certificate
-
27-10-2008, 10:43 AM #2
You should be able to get the death certificate, I had a uncle who was killed while this section was laying mines in Great Yarmouth in July 1940, I have his death certificate although cause of death just states "Due to war operations"
The German air force dropped landmines by parachute, as he was on fire watch it could have been one of them.
The mines could also have been part of the defenses that were rapidly built as anti invasion measures, a series of 'stop lines' like the GHQ Line which ran from Somerset - Reading then south of London, Guildford and Aldershot to Canvey Island and Great Chesterford in Essex. You can still see many of the pillboxes from these lines traveling around the countryside today.
Keith
-
27-10-2008, 10:59 AM #3AstoriaGuest
This site lists civilian casualties, might be worth a try
https://www.cwgc.org/
-
27-10-2008, 12:00 PM #4
- Join Date
- Oct 2004
- Location
- Kent
- Posts
- 16,792
As Keith has suggested, there's no point getting a death certificate if you're looking for a more detailed account of the death. There wouldn't have been an inquest.
Iver isn't as isolated as you make out - it's between Slough* and Uxbridge - both places would have been worth bombing.
*"Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough"
-
02-11-2008, 9:53 PM #5iverladyGuest
many thanks
many thanks to all for the very interesting replies.
i had not realised that land mines were dropped from planes.
many thanks
sue
-
03-11-2008, 10:07 AM #6NickMGuest
They weren't exactly land mines - they were just mines - bombs dropped by parachute, which often got caught in trees or on buildings. They were about the size of a UK post box. They usually had timing mechanisms, and designed to catch the unwary when they emerged from their shelters after an air-raid.
The firemen and rescue workers didn't have time for much reverence - my father was a fireman during the London Blitz, and in many places where big bombs had gone off, they had to just put arms, legs, heads and torsos into coffins, not knowing who the people were. That was a side of the wartime fireman's job that few talked about. The names of the dead were usually found from neighbours and relatives.
-
05-12-2008, 3:42 PM #7JessyBGuest
Taking up the original point, can anyone tell me if deaths during the World Wars were registered in the usual way? i.e. if someone was killed in action, would their death be listed along with everyone else who died that year, or would you have to look at specific sites like the CWGC?
Thank you.
-
05-12-2008, 4:28 PM #8v.wellsGuest
On FMP under military select "soldiers died in the great war" and it will bring up a GRO order ref if the name is there. If the body was identified by tags ect then it could have been registered by the officer in charge or chaplain.
-
06-12-2008, 8:30 AM #9ProcatGuest
Soldiers Died In The Great War is not the index to the death certificates. It lists similar though not identical iinformation to the CWGC site.
I think what Vanessa intended to direct you to on FMP was the Armed forces deaths 1796-1994 section. This will give you the index details for the soldier which will allow you to purchase the certificate from the GRO - FMP has a link to the GRO.
-
06-12-2008, 10:05 AM #10
- Join Date
- Oct 2004
- Location
- Kent
- Posts
- 16,792
The registration procedure was not the same as in peacetime but I don't think that's what you want to know. Death certificates can be obtained through GRO. Military and overseas events are handled by GRO's overseas section.
You do not need a GRO reference to order a certificate. It's simply a bit cheaper if you do have it.
Helping you trace your British Family History & British Genealogy.
All times are GMT. The time now is 2:28 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5
Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.
Bookmarks