Zeppelin LZ 38 (designated LZ 38) was Zeppelin P Class airship of the German Imperial Army.





Zeppelin LZ 38 (designated LZ 38) was Zeppelin P Class airship of the German Imperial Army.

LZ 38 became the first airship to bomb London on 31 May 1915, dropping 1,400 kilograms (3,000 lb) of bombs on the eastern suburb of London, killing seven people. A consequence of this raid was that reporting restrictions were introduced in England.

 Formerly press coverage contained detailed accounts of the location of bombing raids: after this, only generalised locations were published.
The first bomb, an incendiary, was dropped on 16 Alkham Road. Moving south it dropped eight more bombs. Its ninth landed on 33 Cowper Road setting the house on fire killed 3-year-old Elsie Leggatt and her 11-year-old sister, Elizabeth May.

 The next incendiary set fire to 187 Balls Pond Road causing the death of the married couple, Henry and Caroline Good in the resulting flames. Steering away from the Tower of London, and, over Whitechapel LZ 38 dropped another explosive on Christian Street: 8-year-old Samuel Reuben and 16-year-old Leah Lehrman were killed.

 The seventh and last victim was Eleanor Willis, 67, who died of shock two days later. In total Zeppelin LZ 38 dropped 91 incendiaries, 28 explosive bombs and 2 grenades.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kristina Zhuk was 23 years old, her daughter Kira was 10 months old when they were killed in Gorlovka.

1852, a dark portrait now reveals a heart-breaking history

U.S. Army Hangman John C. Woods Intentionally Botched Nazi Executions To Ensure Their Agonizing Deaths.

Freedomite

Directly from ancient Rome, Carvilio's ring: The excruciating pain of a Roman mother for the death of her son.

The capture of brave Russian officer Rosinski

War crime hangings at Landsberg in May 1946.

Execution by cannon in Shiraz, Iran, circa 1890s.

The Top 6 Deadliest Genocides.

Johann Pauls