Birmingham Post

Welsh terror plot saw bombed in battle over

40 years since bombings across country began in surprise attack on Birmingham

- Mike Lockley

IT has been buried by history, but almost exactly 40 years ago, a bomb ripped through the Birmingham headquarte­rs of the Severn Trent Water Authority.

A warning call had been made to the Guardian newspaper before the January 2, 1982, blast which shattered windows and punctured a hole in the roof.

Within an hour a second bomb had been found at a Stratford-upon-Avon industrial estate and was safely defused. No one was injured in either plot.

The chaos was not the work of Irish terrorists, who had infamously struck before in Birmingham with such hideous human cost.

This time the threat came from Wales.

The individual who made the midnight call to the Guardian’s London offices claimed to be from an organisati­on calling itself The Workers Army of the Welsh Republic.

They did not want independen­ce for their country.

They wanted Severn Trent to pay more for the water that flowed from the Elan Valley reservoirs in midWales into West Midlands taps.

The Birmingham bomb exploded on the roof of a single-storey building attached to Severn Trent’s multi-storey office block in Coventry Road, Sheldon.

Thankfully, within half an hour of the alarm being raised, police had evacuated nearby flats and shops and sealed the street.

The unexploded Stratford bomb had been placed at the offices of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Corporatio­n on an industrial estate in Timothy’s Bridge Road.

IDC were in the headlines at the time over plans to develop part of the Snowdonia National Park.

The company also had links with Margaret Thatcher’s husband, Denis, who served them as business adviser.

The crimes baffled detectives – they had never heard of the The Workers Army of the Welsh Republic.

But they came during a rash of arson attacks on English holiday cottages in Wales.

The planted bombs followed mounting anger over the way Welsh water was being funnelled to feed the West Midlands.

Website The History of Wales reported: “During the 20th century, the drowning of Welsh valleys to supply water for English cities became a contentiou­s subject which led to non-violent and violent campaigns and protests.

“On occasions land in rural Wales was bought by English cities through compulsory purchase and there was little that local people could do to prevent it. Valuable natural resources were being taken from Wales without compensati­on in many cases, and there was a growing feeling of discontent because England was not exploiting her own resources to obtain water, for example the river Trent, the second biggest river in England, produces over 1,400 tonnes of water per day, but has no reservoirs.

“On January 2, 1982, The Welsh Army of Workers claimed responsibi­lity for a bomb explosion at the Birmingham headquarte­rs of the Severn Trent Water Authority. An hour later a second bomb was found and defused at the main complex of the Internatio­nal Developmen­t Corporatio­n

(IDC) in Stratford-upon-Avon.

“Birmingham and the rest of the West Midlands get millions of gallons of water a year from reservoirs in the Elan Valley in Wales and the IDC had only recently been in the news in connection with plans to develop part of the Snowdonia National Park, therefore both incidents were believed to be part of a campaign to get the water authority to pay more for water pumped from Welsh reservoirs to the Midlands.”

And Welsh extremists were evidently becoming bolder.

On the very same day they hit Birmingham, terrorists claimed responsibi­lity for a bomb attack in the heart of Britain’s newspaper industry, Fleet Street.

News agency United Press Internatio­nal reported: “A bomb exploded Saturday night off Fleet Street, where many of Britain’s newspapers are printed. Police believe it was detonated by Welsh nationalis­ts who earlier set two other bombs – one of them in Shakespear­e’s birthplace, Stratfordo­n-Avon.

“No one was hurt in London or Birmingham, where the other bomb exploded, and bomb disposal experts defused the Stratford-on-Avon device that was planted at the offices of a property company connected with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s husband, Denis.

“The Fleet Street bomb exploded ‘with a loud crack’ at the rear of Bouverie Street at 10.30pm, about 10 minutes after an anonymous caller phoned a warning to The Observer newspaper.

“The News of the World, The Sun and the Daily Mail are printed in Bouverie Street, where the office of United Press Internatio­nal is also located.

“‘The device was in a small cardboard box. It consisted of two pieces of tubing with a crude form of watch timing device,’ police spokesman John Simmonds said.

“He said the anonymous caller was a man with a ‘mildly Welsh’ accent, who said, ‘this is a bomb warning’. The caller added a codeword and said, ‘at 10 Bouverie Street. Get on with it boyo’.”

The attacks were condemned by

the ex-president of Plaid Cymru, Gwynfor Evans. He said although he strongly supported the call for England to pay more for Welsh water, he would never condone acts of violence.

The Daily Mirror reported on January 4, 1982: “A wave of bomb attacks by extremists at the weekend was condemned by Welsh Nationalis­t leader Dafydd Wigley yesterday.

“Mr Wigley, MP for Caernarvon, said the party was worried that young people could be drawn into violence by a “faceless group.”

The siphoning of Welsh water began in the 1880s with Lake Vyrnwy, the first reservoir in Wales and, at the time, the biggest man-made lake in the world. It was built for the purpose of supplying Liverpool and Merseyside with fresh water. It flooded the head of the Vyrnwy valley and submerged the small village of Llanwddyn.

Elan Valley’s water has been described as the key to Birmingham’s expansion in the Edwardian period.

The Elan Valley Aqueduct (nicknamed the EVA) was the vision of Birmingham City Council, known then as the Birmingham Corporatio­n and led by Joseph Chamberlai­n.

Their concern for the health of Birmingham’s rapidly expanding population was the driving ideology behind the awe-inspiring civil engineerin­g scheme.

The valleys, a picturesqu­e rural region near the Welsh town of Rhayadar,

was identified by the corporatio­n in 1892 as a potential source of clean water to feed into the city for its inhabitant­s and industry.

Through an act of Parliament, the Corporatio­n were able to make a compulsory purchase of the water catchment and start the ambitious plans for the EVA, with James Mansergh appointed as the project engineer.

By 1897 work was under way, with the Birmingham Corporatio­n Waterworks Department constructi­ng housing, recreation­al centres, pubs and shops for the workers who moved to Wales to work on the project. The first phase of work was completed by 1904, however, work has been continuous since then with improvemen­ts and repairs. Today Severn Trent are undertakin­g an incredible civil engineerin­g project to create a new 16 mile pipeline for Birmingham.

The maintenanc­e tunnels and waterways are a strange mixture of the old and new, cabling, lights and plastic piping are housed within passages of hundred year old brick.

Externally, the weathered stones, moss and lichen licked, stand like goliaths in the idyllic valley.

The importance of the EVA within Birmingham’s history can’t be understate­d, it provided health for the people and economic advancemen­t for the city.

It’s a prime example of Victorian ingenuity and awe-inspiring engineerin­g.

 ?? ?? > One of the Elan Valley dams in mid-Wales – the importance of the water source in the city’s history can’t be understate­d
> One of the Elan Valley dams in mid-Wales – the importance of the water source in the city’s history can’t be understate­d
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 ?? ?? > A police officer stands outside the Severn Trent Authority offices in Birmingham following the blast
> A police officer stands outside the Severn Trent Authority offices in Birmingham following the blast

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