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View Full Version : Pensioner used live artillery shell as a doorstop for 20 years


the eXiLe
07-03-2007, 04:06 AM
For decades the seven-inch-long shell had been a family memento, polished and given pride of place on the mantlepiece.

The First World War relic also served as a toy and finally, for the past 20 years, as a front doorstop at the home of 68-year-old Thelma Bonnett.

At any time during all those years, however, it could have exploded. The German squat shell was live, packed with its original payload and with its firing mechanism primed, experts have said.


http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/06_03/ThelmaBonnett1SWNS_468x375.jpg


It was only when a neighbour saw the shell outside Mrs Bonnett's door that the danger became clear.

The police were called and they summoned Royal Navy bomb disposal experts to the house in Paignton, Devon.

Several neighbours were evacuated from their homes and the device was taken to a local quarry and exploded.

It had been in the family for nearly a century after her grandfather Arthur Croxall brought it home in 1918. "I had no idea it was dangerous," Mrs Bonnett said.

"Grandfather picked it up on his travels with the Merchant Navy in 1918. My father used to polish it all the time and kept it on the mantelpiece.

"It looked German because of the writing on the top. "When I was young, five of us children would play with it. I don't think he would have brought it back if he'd known it was live."

The mortar shell was seen propping open the door by neighbour John Malinovskis.

He said: "I put two and two together and thought, 'That really shouldn't be there'.

"I asked Thelma if she knew about it and she said, 'Oh yes, it's from the war'. She said her father had polished it and kept it on the sideboard."

Mrs Bonnett's son Steve added: "I remember it in my grandparents' house when I was growing up. I probably played with it a few times. It was just one of those things that was always around."

A spokesman for the bomb squad said a firing mechanism had been activated during the First World War but the shell failed to go off. The mechanism had since fallen off but the 'live' charge could have exploded at any time.

Mortar shells are fired at a steep angle with a plunging trajectory so they either explode in the air above the enemy positions or upon impact.

Light and portable, mortars were an effective weapon on the Western Front where soldiers faced one another in well-defended trenches.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: "The shell was packed full of explosives and it could have gone off at any time.

"It was brought back from France in 1914 and had been used in battle when it had been fired but failed to go off. "There is a time delay on these type of shells. A brass ring could be turned on top which gave them enough time to fire it to go off in the air or on the ground."



http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=465694&in_page_id=1770 (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=465694&in_page_id=1770)

akjim
07-03-2007, 07:44 AM
EX,,,A little old lady client of mine who's husband invented a form of radar for you guys during WWII, even made his name in Time magazine during the blitz had a couple sticks of 65 year old dynamite and boxes of military flares in his barn attic. Pretty interesting guy. He was given one of the patterns for fiberglass and had become quite wealthy. I found that stuff when we were clearing out his "workshop". This was well before 9/11 hype so no "bomb squads" in rural maine, I very gently moved it all into padded cardboard boxes and deposited them in the sea. figured the cardboard and contents would rot in short time. My dad had told me a hundred times how unstable they could become if stored for long periods.

allesennogwat
07-03-2007, 11:38 AM
My grandfather had an anti-aircraft shell that was suppose be a "dud" but it was not deactivated. He wanted to make lamp with it. He was taking it apart sitting in a chair with the back of it towards him and front of it pointed towards the floor. It went off !! It blew a hole in the floor and knocked him over on his back. He wasn't hurt. Somebody in the family still has that lamp today.

sjohnson
07-03-2007, 11:56 AM
"When I was young, five of us children would play with it.

Adds a whole new meaning to kids playing kick the can.

16r40
07-03-2007, 11:59 AM
when I was stationed at Ft. Stewart, Ga. back in the 80s, some trailer trash hilljacks took a unexploded mortar round from the impact area back to their trailer and promtly blew up their trailer and their ignorant selves, the only good thing I will say about it, is that they took themslves out of the gene pool.

A buddy of mine who recently retired from the Army, was assigned as NCOIC of the 1st cav museum his last 7 or 8 months, and got a package via USPS from a widow of a WW2 vet who recently died, she figured the museum would like to have some of his souvenirs he picked up in the pacific....jap flag, some jap money, and 2 live jap grenades...."hello EOD"

the eXiLe
07-03-2007, 02:48 PM
I hoped that this one would get some good stories posted, my expectations have been met, great stories indeed!

ENGLISH MIKE
07-03-2007, 06:52 PM
Under the current regime in the UK, I'm surprised she isn't looking forward to a prison sentence for illegal possession of explosives......

knall
07-03-2007, 10:13 PM
UPS delivered a crate of SAW's to a reserve unit in Rhode Island, big ol hole in the side of the box..... reach in... that feels an awfull lot like a pistol grip......