Captain Mathy leaves his mark

Zeppelin Building

59-61 Farringdon Road in London is also known as the Zeppelin Building. I don't know when it received this name; possibly only recently. But it owes it to the fact that its predecessor on the site was destroyed during an air raid on the night of 8 September 1915. The most famous of the Zeppelin commanders, Captain Heinrich Mathy, flew L.13 across central London, dropping bombs from Russell Square to Liverpool Street Station. He and his crew killed 22 people, injured 87 and did over half a million pounds worth of damage, the single most destructive Zeppelin raid of the war. Below is the plaque at the site which commemorates both the destruction of the original premises and its rebuilding in 1917, an act of some optimism and defiance since 'the world war' was still going on with no clear winner in sight.

Zeppelin Building

Thanks to Chris 'Chris A. Williams' Williams for the photos!

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6 thoughts on “Captain Mathy leaves his mark

  1. Post author

    Thanks for that Mike. According to the author of a book on the Zeppelin raids which I reviewed here recently, the clock was originally stopped at 10.49 and was that way for many years, but has now slipped down to 10.40. From the link you've given the pub's own memorial now gives the time as 10.40, so it's a small example of history becoming fuzzy.

  2. joan larsen

    Anyone read a book in my collection: The Zeppelin in Combat by Douglas Robinson? Or my book by Otto Gottberg: The siege of Tsungtau???

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