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97-Year-Old Recounts Harrowing Coventry Blitz Ordeal 85 Years Later
14 Nov
Summary
- 97-year-old Gordon Talbot shares memories of Coventry Blitz in 1940
- His family's air-raid shelter collapsed, leaving them buried before his father dug them out
- Coventry lost its medieval cathedral, with ruins now a symbol of peace and reconciliation

In November 2025, 97-year-old Gordon Talbot recounted his harrowing experience of the Coventry Blitz, which occurred 85 years ago on the night of November 14, 1940. Talbot, who was just 11 years old at the time, vividly described the chaos and destruction that unfolded as his family's air-raid shelter collapsed, leaving them temporarily buried before his father, a former miner, dug them out.
Talbot's memories offer a poignant firsthand account of the devastating Coventry Blitz, which lasted 11 hours and involved nearly 500 Luftwaffe bombers. The official death toll was 554, though many more remain unaccounted for. Talbot recalled the "foul air with cordite" and the sight of Coventry's medieval cathedral burning, a tragic loss that left the city's iconic ruins as a symbol of international peace and reconciliation.
Despite the horrors he witnessed, Talbot said he was never truly frightened as a child, a testament to the resilience of the human spirit in the face of such adversity. His story serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices and hardships endured by those who lived through the Blitz, and the importance of preserving the memory of these events for future generations.




