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	Wearethemods
	 Aberdeenshire  | 
	 
	1 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  8:43am  
	 
	Hello all,
Does anyone remember the huge fire at the Ministry of Pensions in Gosford Street, 15th June 1964, formerly the old 'Morris' Building? An interesting fact is that the top floors were sealed off and were full of blankets, flattened cardboard coffins & storage of plasma amongst other things! Those working on the lower floors were completely unaware of this until the fire. This time of course was at the height of the 'Cold War' and Civil Defence in case of Nuclear attack was high on the political agenda. I remember quite clearly photographs in the Telegraph showing the piles of blankets burning after the outside walls had collapsed and patients being evacuated from Gulson Hospital. 
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	gangan
	 Stockton, Southam  | 
	 
	2 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  8:51am  
	 
	On this day, we were playing with our old motorbikes at The Greenhill, the area surrounding Stoke Guild House. Hundreds of charred bits of paper were carried on the breeze and landed all around us 
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	scrutiny
	 coventry  | 
	 
	3 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  9:56am  
	 
	If you type in Gulson Road Hospital in the search box, there are a few references to the fire on that thread.   
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	PhiliPamInCoventry
	 Holbrooks  | 
	 
	4 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  10:32am  
	 
	Hi all,  
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	5 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  8:54pm  
	 
	On 3rd Jul 2013  8:43am, Wearethemods said: 
Does anyone remember the huge fire at the Ministry of Pensions in Gosford Street, 15th June 1964, formerly the old 'Morris' Building ?  
Remember it? I was living three doors up from it!
I was walking home from school when I first saw the blaze. The police wouldn't let us through the cordon so I had to walk the long way round via Godiva Street and Cox Street. Everyone assumed the Peacock Inn was a gonner but it escaped with only minor damage to the roof tiles.
There was a second fire eighteen months later and our immediate thought was "not again!".
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	Foxcote
	 Warwick  | 
	 
	6 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  9:02pm  
	 
	A photograph of the hospital being evacuated.
 
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	PhiliPamInCoventry
	 Holbrooks  | 
	 
	7 of 65 
	Wed 3rd Jul 2013  11:02pm  
	 
	Hi Foxcote, Hi all  
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
| Dreamtime | 
	 
	8 of 65 
	Thu 4th Jul 2013  7:34am  
	 
	
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	PhiliPamInCoventry
	 Holbrooks  | 
	 
	9 of 65 
	Thu 4th Jul 2013  9:46am  
	 
	Hi Dreamtime  
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
| Dreamtime | 
	 
	10 of 65 
	Thu 4th Jul 2013  5:48pm  
	 
	
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	11 of 65 
	Thu 4th Jul 2013  8:21pm  
	 
	On 3rd Jul 2013  11:02pm, PhiliPamInCoventry said: 
On the day of the fire, it was a warm dry day which at least made the evacuation that bit easier than if it had been wet. Causes for the fire still remain speculation as far as I know, which range from spontaneous combustion, or even static discharges between stored blankets. 
The probable cause I heard at the time was the sun's rays* being focussed through the base of a glass bottle which acted like a magnifying glass creating enough heat to ignite fabric.
*We used to have sun in those days!  | 
| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
| Dreamtime | 
	 
	12 of 65 
	Fri 5th Jul 2013  3:31am  
	 
	
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	DBC
	 Nottinghamshire  | 
	 
	13 of 65 
	Sun 7th Jul 2013  10:34am  
	 
	A work colleague of mine from GEC was working abroad when this happened, and he was trying to sort out his rather tangled tax affairs with the Coventry tax office. He started to get annoyed with them when they seemed to be sending him the same paperwork and questions on numerous occasions . In the end he wrote to them asking them why they were doing this and jokingly asked them "have you had a fire or something". Back came the one word answer "yes".
 
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
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	Billybobs
	 South Warwickshire  | 
	 
	14 of 65 
	Sun 20th Oct 2013  11:45am  
	 
	I was working in Meriden at Higgs & Hill when the fire broke out. We could hear fire engines, their bells ringing, travelling along the A45, presumably from Birmingham to help out. After work, a few of us went into town to watch the spectacle, much of the chat was about the tax records that were going up in flames, nobody around where I was standing realised the drama that was happening at Gulson Hospital.
Shortly after the fire I decided to join the Auxiliary Fire Brigade, I was 18 at the time. I anticipated that some time in the future I too would be involved in fighting some huge fire. As it turned out, for the period I was there, about 3yrs.... not one single fire. Instead we were training for the anticipated nuclear war. We were assigned to deliver water from Coombe Abbey lake to the city centre via a series of pipelines that we had to lay. There was an obvious flaw in the planning, had a nuclear bomb dropped on Coventry we would have been annihilated or at the best subjected to radioactive fallout. But I suppose the powers that be felt such little detail should not interfere with our preparations.
Many Sunday mornings we were sent out in Green Goddesses to fight imaginary fires at various factory complexes in Coventry. On another occasion we went on an exercise on the South Coast putting out more imaginary fires. Thank goodness, no fires no nuclear warfare, just plenty of good fun and consuming the odd pint or two.. or three 
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| Local History and Heritage - Ministry of Pensions fire, 1964 | |
| Rob Orland | 
	 
	15 of 65 
	Sun 20th Oct 2013  11:51am  
	 
	
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