Daughter of George and Louisa.
In 1911 family lived at 15 Bandon Road, Bethnal Green.
In 1939 Jane was working in Gents Tailoring.
In 1940 married Henry in Hackney, they have no children.
In 1943 the family lived at 29 Morris House, Roman Road, Bethnal Green.
Jane* died with her mother-in-law Ethel and her sister-in-law Eileen in the worst civilian disaster of WWII.
*Birth and marriage Matilda Jane.
stairwaytoheavenmemorial.org
On 3rd March 1943 the siren sounded at 8.17pm. People made their way in the pitch dark of the blackout to file in an orderly manner down the steps to the unfinished Bethnal Green underground station, which had been used as an air-raid shelter since 1940. At 8.27pm the searchlight went on and 3 buses unloaded their passengers at the shelter entrance. Suddenly those waiting to enter the single, narrow doorway heard the unfamiliar, deafening sound of a brand new anti-aircraft rocket battery firing nearby. Never having heard it before they assumed it was deadly enemy bombs exploding. At that same moment a woman with a child fell at the bottom of the wet, slippery stairway pulling an elderly man down with her. Before they could get up others fell on top of them. The crowd above continued pressing forward, unable to see what was happening below in the dark. With more people falling on top of them a complete jam of about 300 people, five or six deep, built up within seconds between the floor and ceiling. People couldn't move, pinned down by the weight of those above them – and then they couldn't breathe. It was 11.40pm before the last person was pulled out. By then 173 were dead – 84 women, 62 children and 27 men. Over 90 were injured. Many more suffered life-long trauma, particularly the rescuers, from the dreadful experience.
Daughter of George and Louisa.
In 1911 family lived at 15 Bandon Road, Bethnal Green.
In 1939 Jane was working in Gents Tailoring.
In 1940 married Henry in Hackney, they have no children.
In 1943 the family lived at 29 Morris House, Roman Road, Bethnal Green.
Jane* died with her mother-in-law Ethel and her sister-in-law Eileen in the worst civilian disaster of WWII.
*Birth and marriage Matilda Jane.
stairwaytoheavenmemorial.org
On 3rd March 1943 the siren sounded at 8.17pm. People made their way in the pitch dark of the blackout to file in an orderly manner down the steps to the unfinished Bethnal Green underground station, which had been used as an air-raid shelter since 1940. At 8.27pm the searchlight went on and 3 buses unloaded their passengers at the shelter entrance. Suddenly those waiting to enter the single, narrow doorway heard the unfamiliar, deafening sound of a brand new anti-aircraft rocket battery firing nearby. Never having heard it before they assumed it was deadly enemy bombs exploding. At that same moment a woman with a child fell at the bottom of the wet, slippery stairway pulling an elderly man down with her. Before they could get up others fell on top of them. The crowd above continued pressing forward, unable to see what was happening below in the dark. With more people falling on top of them a complete jam of about 300 people, five or six deep, built up within seconds between the floor and ceiling. People couldn't move, pinned down by the weight of those above them – and then they couldn't breathe. It was 11.40pm before the last person was pulled out. By then 173 were dead – 84 women, 62 children and 27 men. Over 90 were injured. Many more suffered life-long trauma, particularly the rescuers, from the dreadful experience.
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