Person    | Male  Born 29/11/1923  Died 17/4/1941

Michael Hodge

Categories: Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2 i

Commemorated on a memorial as being a civilian who was killed in WW2. Includes mercantile marines and emergency services personnel.

Michael Hodge

One of five fire-watchers killed on the night bombs fell on Chelsea Old Church and the surrounding area.

Aged seventeen and very tall for his age. He was waiting to go up to Cambridge but talking of enlisting in the Black Watch. He was staying at the Grosvenor Hotel with his parents and used to come down to Chelsea on Wednesday evenings by taxi. The fatal bomb fell on a Wednesday.

Andrew Behan has researched this man: 

Fire-watcher Michael James Hodge was born on 29 November 1923 in the City of London, the son of Lt. Col. James Philip Hodge, M.P. and Anna Fortunée Hodge née Venture. His father, having spent the First World War in the Army Pay Department as an Inspector of Pay Offices, was a barrister at law, a chartered accountant and the Liberal member of parliament for Preston from 1922 to 1924. His mother was the daughter of a French shipowner from Marseille. The 1939 England and Wales Register shows him as Attending School and living with his parents and elder sister at 1 Carlyle Mansions, Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. He was killed, aged 17 years, by a German parachute mine in the early hours of 17 April 1941 in Chelsea.

Andrew points out that "The spelling of his first forename varies on records I have researched. His Civil Registration Birth Index record shows Michael J Hodge, the 1939 England and Wales Register shows him as Michal J Hodge and both UK WWII Civilian Deaths 1939-1945 and the Civil Registration Death Index records shows Michel J Hodge." The confusion was probably caused by his French mother (mothers, tut!). We've gone with the spelling on the plaque.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Michael Hodge

Commemorated ati

Chelsea Old Church

The splendid A London Inheritance has found a booklet that was published to r...

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Other Subjects

Ernest John Purdy

Ernest John Purdy

Member of the ARP/Civil Defence Services - stretcher bearer. Andrew Behan has kindly provided this research: Ernest John Purdy was born on 24 May 1913 in Poplar, a twin with his sister, May Floren...

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial
Percy Crane

Percy Crane

Auxiliary fireman killed in the bomb attack on Henry Cavendish School, Balham. Andrew Behan has kindly carried out further research: Percy Crane was born on 1 December 1907 in Clapham, a son of Si...

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial
Thomas John Steward

Thomas John Steward

Member of the ARP/Civil Defence Services - auxiliary ambulance driver. Andrew Behan has kindly provided this research: Thomas John Steward was born on 19 December 1910 in Lewisham, the 4th of the ...

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial
John Desmond Bernal, MA, FRS.

John Desmond Bernal, MA, FRS.

Crystallographer. John Desmond Bernal was born on 10 May 1901 in Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland, the eldest of the five children of Samuel George Bernal (1864-1919) and Elizabeth Bernal née Mil...

Person, Armed Forces, Emergency Services, Science, Ireland

1 memorial
Auxiliary Fireman George Eric Goldsmith

Auxiliary Fireman George Eric Goldsmith

From the Sub Fire Station 6W, Cheyne Place. Died in a fire which took the lives of seven firemen, known as "The Wednesday".

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial