Alex Glendinning

The Glendinning Family in Hartlepool
In 1908 my great-uncle Henry Glendinning had taken on the lease of Moorside
House, No 4, Henry Smith Terrace, Hartlepool to provide his mother and her
remaining family (one daughter and a sister-in-law) with a home.
On the 16th December 1914 Ann, Mary and Edith Glendinning were to witness
the first engagement of World War I on British soil. My grandfather Fred
Glendinning was in England on home leave from the Malayan Colonial Office
P.W.D. and may also have been present. His album contains many photographs
of the damage which were later reproduced as postcards.
The previous evening four battle cruisers, 'Seydlitz', 'Moltke',
'Von der Tann' and 'Derrflinger'; one heavy cruiser, 'Blucher',
four light cruisers and two flottillas of destroyers had left their base,
heading out into the North Sea. The intention was to bombard Hartlepool
and Scarborough, both were by now fortified towns and considered legitimate
targets.
At dawn, six miles east of Hartlepool, shots were exchanged between
them and the destroyers of the Local Defence Patrol who left to raise the
alarm. No-one in the town heard anything. The 'Seydiltz', 'Moltke'
and 'Blucher' continued to steam towards the nearest target and the
rest headed for Scarborourgh.
At 8.10 a.m. as the inhabitants were readying themselves for the day's work,
the first shell was fired. They were aiming at the shore batteries and the
Lighthouse. The shell cut all the lines of communications between the batteries
throwing them into confusion.
By 8.25 a.m. most of the ships had come as close as four thousand yards
and had begun to pour their fire into the gun emplacements and the docks.
Some of the armour piercing shells had delayed action fuses and a number
bounced off the batteries into the town.
Henry Smith Terrace was dangerously close to the action. There were hundreds
of people milling about, taken totally by surprise, the coastguards were
doing their best to evacuate everybody safely. The air was filled with black
smoke, the screams of shells passing overhead and the cries of children
seperated from their families. For about three quarters of an hour the bombardment
continued, 1,150 shells were fired into the area killing 112 and wounding
over 200.
When it was clear the attack was over people began to filter back to the
shoreline, some helping to dig out the injured from collapsed buildings,
others helping themselves to shell fragments to keep as souveniers.
Carlton Terrace - once the home of Spark Mason Glendinning and his family
- in December 1914
As was to be expected the townspeople were on edge for some time after
this event and several days later a rumour was started that the Germans
were returning and had given the town two hours warning prior to launching
another attack. Panic ensued as people rushed to get their belongings together
and get away. The streets filled up again but it was a false alarm. Hartlepool
was not to be attacked again.
At some stage a member of the family rescued a shell casing and it was
taken home, polished and left in the hall. That shell has since been used
as an umbrella stand by four generations of Glendinnings.
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