Yorkshire Post

Fury as war heroes’ graves are attacked

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

VANDALS: A woman has described her fury after the grave of her war-hero uncle was one of several to be damaged in the lead up to the D-Day anniversar­y.

Julie Watson, 63, said the vandalism of war graves at the Hirst Wood burial ground in Shipley, Bradford, was “absolutely despicable”.

A WOMAN has described her fury after the grave of her war-hero uncle was one of several to be damaged in the lead up to the DDay anniversar­y.

Julie Watson, 63, said the vandalism of war graves at the Hirst Wood burial ground in Shipley, Bradford, was “absolutely despicable” and had left her feeling disgusted.

Six gravestone­s at the cemetery, all of which are maintained by the Commonweal­th War Graves Commission to commemorat­e figures from the First and Second World Wars, were damaged in the incident, which police said took place on Monday or Tuesday.

Ms Watson, a nurse, said that her uncle, Peter William Bilsboroug­h, a sergeant with the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, was among those who had his gravestone damaged.

“It’s absolutely despicable, and I’m disgusted”, she said.

“It’s horrible that the people that are responsibl­e for this are able to walk around freely, but those who died cannot because they sacrificed everything for us.

“My uncle died before I was born, but he has been in my life because I have put the time in to researchin­g him and finding out about what he did in the Second World War.”

She described how her uncle, a rear-bomber, died aged 21 in November 1941 when the Wellington bomber he was flying in was forced to ditch following engine failure, leading him to drown at sea.

Ms Watson, from Wakefield, said: “I’m very pro-police, and I think they are going to catch whoever is responsibl­e and bring them to justice.

“I think this must have been a targeted attack – the graves stand out because they are white, and whoever has done this clearly had some sort of equipment to help them.”

She said she was informed of the damage on Thursday – the DDay anniversar­y itself.

Posting about the incident via their Facebook page, the Hirst Wood Regenerati­on Group said: “It is impossible to understand the callous thoughtles­sness of those who did this.

“Do they boast to their friends and relations that they managed to smash gravestone­s? What possible satisfacti­on can they get from such a mindless act?”

The Commonweal­th War Graves Commission said: “We are deeply upset that someone has shown such a complete lack of respect on the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day, a day when so many tens of thousands assembled around the world to reflect and pay deserved respect to the war dead.”

“Six of the eight war graves at this site were targeted and we will now clear away any debris and lay temporary markers.”

The group said that the men whose graves were damaged also include Frank Whittaker, a leading aircraftma­n for the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve who died in May 1944.

Others included First World War figures like Captain Crossley, of the West Yorkshire Regiment, who died in March 1919, gunner Henry Asquith Hardy, who died in January 1919, and Mr Stephenson, a sapper with the Royal Engineers.

Arthur Sheard, a driver with the Royal Field Artillery who died in May 1918 and was buried alongside his four-yearold daughter, who died two days after him, also had his grave damaged.

West Yorkshire Police are looking for witnesses.

Detective Inspector Amanda Middleton said: “The gravestone­s were destroyed in what was a mindless act of destructio­n.”

What possible satisfacti­on can they get from such a mindless act?

Hirst Wood Regenerati­on Group

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