Tag Archives: Hartlepool raid

Rare Hartlepool Bombardment aftermath footage surfaces

On the early morning of 16 December 1914, the heavy cruiser Blucher, along with the battlecruisers Seydlitz and Moltke of Kaiser Wilhem’s High Seas Fleet closed offshore of the English seaside towns of Scarborough, Hartlepool, and West Hartlepool, firing at least 1,150 shells over a 40-minute period, killing 130 people and injuring over 500, almost all civilians.

It was the most significant attack on the British Home Isles since the Spanish Armada.

Fast forward to 2018, and a local historian stumbled upon something cool.

Mark Simmons, Hartlepool Borough Council’s Museums Curator, bought a box full of broken cameras and lenses for £20 at Tynemouth Market in 2018, thinking they might be useful for his personal projects.

“On getting home, I just took out a few useful pieces and put the rest in storage. It was only later that I got around to sorting through the entire contents. In the bottom of the box, wrapped in sheets of old grease-proof paper, was an old film reel and the title card on the first frames – The Attack on the Hartlepools – was just visible,” said Mark.

“The film is mostly a previously unseen version of the newsreel footage of the bombardment originally made by the Gaumont Company,” said Mark. “It is the best quality of any of the bombardment damage films but, crucially, contains a number of sections that have never been seen before, namely footage of Cleveland Street and the damage to houses at Carlton Terrace including a close up of local women and children.”

Simmons donated the film to the North East Film Archive (NEFA) who worked with the British Film Institute (BFI) to have the fragile Edwardian nitrate film digitized before being properly preserved and stored.

The full film, nearly six minutes in length, is on their website. 

Remembering Hartlepool

On 16 December 1914, German RADM Franz von Hipper led his squadron consisting of the battlecruisers SMS Seydlitz, Von der Tann, Moltke and Derfflinger, the armored cruiser SMS Blücher, light cruisers SMS Strassburg, Graudenz, Kolberg and Stralsund; and 18 destroyers to the English coast. There, he bombarded the ports of Scarborough, Hartlepool, and Whitby, causing nearly 600 casualties. Some 1,150 shells were fired into Hartlepool alone, producing the first British military death on British soil in some 200 years.

An alarm clock with a piece of German shell embedded in the dial, destroyed by the German naval raid on Hartlepool, UK, on the morning of 16 December 1914.

In 1999, locals in Hartlepool established the Heugh Battery Museum as the only WWI battlefield in the UK. Today, it needs $5,000 to stay afloat and only has half that amount.

More here.