POW camp - Search for the dump - August 2011
Yep, that’s right……I’ve been out detecting twice this week :)
I have been talking to a guy who remembers the POW camp well, and not only that, but his father remembers going down to the edge of the camp to rummage ‘through the POW camp dump’. You can imagine my interest in this information and, armed with an aerial photograph, a spade, a metal detector and a finds bag, I went out to the camp to try and track the dump down.
After 30 minutes of trying to evade a rather aggressive horse, and a close encounter with a barbed wire fence, I eventually found the location pinpointed by the guys father. Only problem was, it was right slap dab in the middle of the 9th fairway of the local golf course !!!! Much as I would have liked to, I doubt they would have taken kindly to me digging them a new bunker in an attempt to find an old rubbish dump !
Saddened, I wandered back up towards the road and thought sod it ! Whilst here I may as well give the area a bit of a go with the metal detector.
There weren’t many finds, but one of them has me intrigued, and two nciely confirm that the Germans were here ! :)
:)
Before cleaning…..
And after….
Gibbs was a popular brand back in the war
I am showing these because they are quite the oddest little bulbs I’ve ever seen. Little fish eye lenses on them. :)
A Farthing. Dated 1941
30 cal cartridges. I found these on the way back to the car. I was walking quite briskly with my MD out in front of me, not sweeping, just holding it. I had almost forgotten it was on when it made a familiar tone. I wasn’t expecting to get the all too familiar ‘cartridge tone’ on the POW camp but I got it. Imagine my surprise at this lot coming out of one hole.
I think they were left behind by the American parachutists who were stationed here before shipping out to Normandy. All are unfired but minus the bullet. Very strange !
This is obviously a badge of some description but it is quite badly squished. Anyone recognise it ? It was at the same depth as items I know were from WW2 so I am hopeful…..
The back of the piece….
And now the proof that it was a POW camp. German Pebble buttons Not a stupendous find by any means, but one that confirms the areas use.
The back of the buttons…..
And finally something that I keep finding, but will never tire of doing so. A tea ration tin, in not bad nick considering it’s been buried for 65 years !
So not a bad trip. Shame about the dump but I don’t suppose you can win ‘em all
Steve T