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Leonard Miles

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Awards
  
George Cross

Name
  
Leonard Miles


Died
  
22 September 1940 Hainault, Essex

Buried at
  
City of London Cemetery and Crematorium, Newham

Service/branch
  
Civil Defence Service ARP

Battles/wars
  
World War II * The Blitz

Leonard James Miles GC (1904-1940) was an ARP warden posthumously awarded a posthumous George Cross for the gallantry he showed in leaving his air raid shelter to warn others of a nearby unexploded bomb in Hainault in Essex on 21 September 1940. He was by trade a building contractor.

Contents

21/22 September 1940

ARP Warden Leonard Miles was on duty on the night of 21/22 September 1940 when a Luftwaffe air raid on Ilford commenced. James observed that a parachute mine was falling near his home on Lime Grove, in Hainault, East London. Though he could have safely retreated to a public shelter, he ran towards the danger, in order to warn some people, whom he knew to be in their houses.

Miles was mortally wounded when the mine exploded, but was still conscious, but refused first aid from another warden. He instructed that a nearby fire which had been caused by a broken gas main be attended to first.

He was taken to the King George Hospital, London but died about 24 hours later. He was cremated on 26 September 1940, and his ashes were scattered in the City of London Cemetery on the same day.

George Cross citation

Notice of his award appeared in the London Gazette on 17 January 1941.

References

Leonard Miles Wikipedia