My family is the Morris's. What's your nans name?
Anyway, Ive come back here as I have been given a 126 page book on Ditton of which there is a couple of pages on the "Depot" They read
By 1939, the government began searching for storage sites for the vast quantities of armaments that were being produced. Ditton priors proved to be an ideal site as it was located in the countryside and had good rail access. The quarry had closed a few years before, but the concrete plant was still working, as was the tar plant by the station, although both had closed by 1942. The Cleobury Mortimer and Ditton Priors Railway still carried freight but had closed to passengers on September 24th 1938. A square mile of land besides the station was compulsory purchased from landowners, the principal of whom was lord Boyne, and work began building a large complex of buildings and roads. By 1941, The Royal Naval Armaments Depot, Ditton Priors was open for business. The work produced by the building and the staffing of the depot gave work to local men recently made redundant by the quarry business and to men and women for miles around. For many years more than 30 buses a day ferried workers into what they called the "arms dump" or just "The dump"
The depot was of strategic importance and several searchlight batteries and decoys were situated in the hills around to deceive enemy aircraft. Smith and Beddoes report that Ditton Priors was important enough to be mentioned by Lord Haw Haw on the German wartime radio broadcasts. Heavily laden ammunition trains came into the depot almost continuously, but apart from a German plane crash on Brown Clee Hill and a few bombs dropped near Cleobury Mortimer, Ditton Priors, the line and the depot came through the war unscathed.
Although the passenger train service had closed in 1938, on Good Friday 1965 a special train carrying many railway enthusiasts steamed along the Ditton Priors to Cleobury Mortimer line to mark the final closing of the railway. The end of the RNAD came in the same year although its demise must have been in sight for some time as a thorough survey by the Admiralty in 1958 can only have been undertaken with a view to sale and dispersal of the assets. In the summer of 1966 the ministry of Defence began negotiations with the previous owners of the land at the original price paid by the government. Lord Boyne began his negotiations for the return of his land and also expressed interest in buying another 140 acres at Ditton priors. Negotiations were well advanced with the District Valuer and a date of 17th January 1967 had been made for parties to agree a final figure for sale. Unknown to the section within the Ministry of Defence that was negotiating with lord Boyne and other land owners, another section of the same ministry had given permission for Ditton Priors to be a base for the U.S Army as part of N.A.T.O who had been given short notice to quit France. A letter, dated 1st February 1967 to the Prime Minister from Patrick Neane, Minister of Defence, made it clear that the Minister of defence (Administration) Mr G.W. Reynolds had publicly apologised for the inconvenience caused to Lord Boyne in the house, on BBC TV, Midlands Local News Service and by a personal visit to Lord Boyne at his home in Shropshire. But Lord Boyne and the other landowners had to wait for the return of their land. Indeed a few wlwments of the U.S Army had arrived a few weeks before when the Bridgnorth Journal reported that an "Advance guard" of 200 men with huge military vehicles rumbled through Bridgnorth on their way to their new quarters.
The 233 men of the 608th Ordnance Company of the U.S Army arrived in January 1967, but by April only a few remained. Their main task had been to prepare the base in order to store 22,000 tons of ammunition that had to be moved from their French base. Once thiswas done and the ammunition stored, the majority of the soldiers left for their base at Fort Benning in Georgia, leaving only a few personnel and civilian staff. At this time, the First Sergeant Lawrence Patchen wrote to the Bridgnorth Journal:-
As First Sergeant in charge of the company and a professional soldier, my tours of duty have taken me round the world, and it has been very refreshing and enjoyable to know that people from two different countries can meet on common ground without the friction and strife that seems to dominate the world today. So from the bottom of our hearts we, the N.C.O's and men of 608 company want to say Thank You.
The remaining American soldiers stayed in Ditton Priors for about another 15 months, but it is remembered as a time of great excitement. About 100 local people found work on the site, including Cecil Bradley, who worked as a security man on the base. The soldiers went out of their way to woo the local people, opening their social clubs to villagers and organising many shows and fetes to entertain the locals. It was with much regret that, in June 1968, the Americans departed and Cecil Bradley lowered the flag for the last time.
Below are some random pictures I have come across in the books I have received..
I hope the small extras prove interesting to someone.
Thanks for looking