On the weekend of the 3rd May 2025 you are all invited to the Derry Hill and Studley celebration of the 80th Anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day.
VE Day marked the end of the war in Europe. The actual anniversary is 8th May.
Over the weekend we plan to:
Raise the Union Jack (we need a flag pole)
Remember those who paid the ultimate price in a Memorial Service at our village War Memorial
Celebrate peace with a 1940's themed dance at the Lansdowne Hall
Hold a Cream Tea village picnic event / Street Party
Light the Derry Hill and Studley peace candles
Tell the Gladys Daniel's story of life in Derry Hill and Studley during World War II.
On the evening of the 8th May there will an opportunity to attend the Bowood beacon lighting on Bowood Estate - more information soon.
Herbert H Fortune lived at 45 Church Road. He was killed in Action on 17th April 1943. He was a Sargent in the RAF Volunteer Reserve and stationed at Mildenhall, Suffolk. Herbert was the radio operator and gunner in a Stirling MkIII. They took off from Mildenhall on route for their target of Mannheim-Ludwigshafen Germany. Herbert was 25 y
Herbert H Fortune lived at 45 Church Road. He was killed in Action on 17th April 1943. He was a Sargent in the RAF Volunteer Reserve and stationed at Mildenhall, Suffolk. Herbert was the radio operator and gunner in a Stirling MkIII. They took off from Mildenhall on route for their target of Mannheim-Ludwigshafen Germany. Herbert was 25 years old. He was the son of Robert and Sarah Jane Fortune (buried at Christ Church, Derry Hill) and husband to Lillie Fortune of Chippenham. Herbert lies in the Rheinberg War Cemetry in Germany. His grave is inscribed – At the going down of the sun we will remember you.
Pilot Officer Herbert George Haddrell was born in 1913 and grew up in Derry Hill. He lived in Studley Lodge (Bowood White Gates) with his parents and went to Derry Hill school.
On 15th October 1944 he was at the controls when his Halifax aircraft took off from Sandtoft on a night cross-country training flight. While flying at 12,000 feet,
Pilot Officer Herbert George Haddrell was born in 1913 and grew up in Derry Hill. He lived in Studley Lodge (Bowood White Gates) with his parents and went to Derry Hill school.
On 15th October 1944 he was at the controls when his Halifax aircraft took off from Sandtoft on a night cross-country training flight. While flying at 12,000 feet, the port inner engine caught fire and the crew were unable to quell, or control, the flames as they spread towards the fuselage. Three crew members managed to bale out from the aircraft but four of the crew (including Herbert George aged 30) stayed with the aircraft as the rear gunner who had difficulty in escaping from his turret. The Halifax smashed into the heavily wooded Copreston Fell on Glendhu Hill in Kielder Forest - a wooden cross marks the spot.
His body was returned home to Derry Hill and buried at Christ Church. George’s name is engraved on our war memorial.
Captain Geoffrey Kenelm Hood Irish Guards lived at Buckhill House in Bowood. Although he died after the end of the war he is commemorated on the Derry Hill War Memorial. Born in London on 21 Nov 1920 to Albert Oscar Hood (Agent to Lord Lansdowne) and Theresa Emily Marjory DIGBY. Geoffrey Kenelm Hood passed away on 24 Jun 1946 in Hammersmith, London, England.
Lance Corporal, Service Number: 5674978, Hampshire Regiment 5th Bn. Died 08 February 1944 aged 27 years old. Thomas is buried at Minturno Cemetery, Italy. He was the son of Edward and Louise James; husband of Vera James, of Derry Hill. Thomas and Vera Haddrell had married early in 1942. At dawn on 7 February 1944 the 5th Battalion repul
Lance Corporal, Service Number: 5674978, Hampshire Regiment 5th Bn. Died 08 February 1944 aged 27 years old. Thomas is buried at Minturno Cemetery, Italy. He was the son of Edward and Louise James; husband of Vera James, of Derry Hill. Thomas and Vera Haddrell had married early in 1942. At dawn on 7 February 1944 the 5th Battalion repulsed another determined attack on Ornito, inflicting considerable losses on the enemy. That night, as part of a general attack by 138 Brigade, they attacked the neighbouring mountain, Cerasola, which was still in German hands.
Charles lived at Bowood and was a Captain in the Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry. He was killed 20th August 1944 in Italy aged 27. Charles is commemorated on Panel 2 of the Cassino memorial. Cassino War Cemetery lies in the Commune of Cassino, Province of Frosinone, 139 kilometres south-east of Rome.
Lieutenant Lord Edward Norman Petty-Fitzmaurice lived at Bowood. He was the youngest son of Lt.-Col. Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice, D.S.O., M.V.O., 6th Marquess of Lansdowne, and his wife, Elizabeth Caroline Stanley Hope. He was the brother to Charles Hope Lansdowne. He was in the 3rd Battalion, Irish Guards and was killed on 1
Lieutenant Lord Edward Norman Petty-Fitzmaurice lived at Bowood. He was the youngest son of Lt.-Col. Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice, D.S.O., M.V.O., 6th Marquess of Lansdowne, and his wife, Elizabeth Caroline Stanley Hope. He was the brother to Charles Hope Lansdowne. He was in the 3rd Battalion, Irish Guards and was killed on 11 Aug 1944 aged 22. He is buried at Tilly-sur-Seulles, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France.