THE story of a national hero
with links to Castle Bromwich
is among the extraordinary
tales recounted in a new First
World War exhibition.
William Leefe Robinson has been
awarded the Victoria Cross after
becoming the first British pilot to
shoot down a German zeppelin on
home soil.
The pilot (pictured), who became an
overnight celebrity, was so shocked
by the sudden fame and swooning
women that he soon begged for a
posting to the Western Front!
While his place in the history
books has been assured – some
claim his VC was the fastest ever
presented – the local connection
is rather less known.
It has been
documented by Solihull Council’s
heritage and local studies team and
features in the Solihull Remembers
exhibition, at The Core Theatre.
The display collates more than four
years of painstaking research by the experts.
Their investigations shed light on
those local men who had fought in
the conflict, as well as the impact the
war effort had here in the borough.
Tracey Williams, who oversaw the
project, said: “We wanted to tell the
stories behind the names on our war
memorials.”
In the case of Mr Robinson, he had
trained at Castle Bromwich in 1915,
a year before he brought down the
enemy airship.
The use of a new type of
incendiary bullet was a landmark
moment, effectively bringing the
German bombing campaign to a
juddering halt.
As for the young
pilot, still only 21-years-old, he would
eventually get his wish and was
posted to France, but was captured on his first patrol.
His incarceration took a heavy toll
on his health and while he survived
to be released, he would sadly
succumb to the Spanish Flu on New
Year’s Eve 1918.
The exhibition also details those
recruited to fight from Marston
Green’s Cottage Homes and the
auxiliary hospital also set up in the
village.
Launched to coincide with the
100th anniversary of Armistice Day,
when the guns finally fell silent, the
exhibition runs until February 2
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