George Daniel Jones

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Born1900 (1900)
Died24 February 1969(1969-02-24) (aged 68–69)
Bristol, England
OccupationsGas company worker, school welfare officer, swimming coach, sports journalist
KnownforFounding Bristol Central Swimming Club and removing incendiary bombs from a gas holder during the Bristol Blitz
George Daniel Jones
Born1900 (1900)
Died24 February 1969(1969-02-24) (aged 68–69)
Bristol, England
OccupationsGas company worker, school welfare officer, swimming coach, sports journalist
Known forFounding Bristol Central Swimming Club and removing incendiary bombs from a gas holder during the Bristol Blitz
SpouseLily Jones
Children3
AwardsGeorge Medal
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
BranchBritish Army
Unit15th Hampshire Regiment
ConflictsWorld War I

George Daniel Jones GM (1900 – 24 February 1969) was a Bristol gas worker, swimming organiser, coach, and school welfare officer. He was awarded the George Medal for gallantry after climbing a gas holder during the Bristol Blitz in November 1940 and removing incendiary bombs that threatened a large industrial and residential area, primarily The Dings, St Philip's, and Barton Hill.[1][2] Alongside his wartime bravery, he was a prominent figure in Bristol swimming in the mid-20th century, founding Bristol Central Swimming Club and serving the club for decades as its secretary, treasurer, and coach.[3][4]

Jones was born in 1900.[5] He grew up in Bristol and became involved in swimming through Broad Plain Lads' Club, which offered swimming alongside football, cricket, and tennis.[6][3]

Still under age, he served in the British Army during World War I, and later accounts place his service in France and Germany as part of the 15th Hampshire Regiment during the British occupation of the Rhineland after the Armistice.[5][3] After the war he returned to Bristol and resumed civilian life.[3]

Career

Jones worked for the Bristol Gas Company for about 20 years.[6][3] The Bristol Gas Company was one of the city's major employers, and its Avon Street works at St Philip's formed part of the network of gasworks that supplied fuel and lighting to Bristol homes, streets, and industries across the 19th and 20th centuries.[7][8][9] By the interwar years he and his wife Lily were living at 24 Folly Lane, St Philip's, in company housing beside the large gas holder later associated with the act for which he received the George Medal.[5] After leaving the gas company he became a school welfare officer, or school attendance officer, with Bristol Education Committee, a post he held until his retirement in the mid-1960s.[6][3][10] He was also active in youth work in the St Philip's and Dings districts, where he helped train Boys' Brigade bandsmen and coached local boys in swimming and other sports.[11][12][13]

Sport ran alongside his working life. In his younger years he played association football as an amateur for St Philip's Adult School and the Union Jacks, and later appeared for both Bristol City and Bristol Rovers. He also had trials for Chelsea and won a county cap for Gloucestershire in 1927 and 1928.[5][14][15]

Swimming, however, became the chief focus of his public life. After returning to his old club after the war, he took on the roles of captain and secretary in 1924, and remained in office until the club came to an end in 1936.[6][3] On 1 January 1937, Jones and others established Bristol Central Swimming Club, with Jones serving from the beginning as secretary, treasurer, and coach.[6][3] Under his long stewardship, Bristol Central developed into one of the leading swimming clubs in the west of England.[16][17][18]

Jones also became a familiar journalistic voice in local sports features. For about 15 years he served as swimming correspondent for the Bristol Evening Post and its sports paper, the Green 'Un, ultimately retiring from the role in 1967.[6][3] His influence extended beyond club administration. In 1948 he was appointed one of Britain's Olympic coaches and regional talent scouts, and he was appointed again in 1952.[5][6] Among the swimmers associated with him and Bristol Central were Ray Legg, Stella Beedle, Gyda Roberts, Jeannie Cave, and Sue Cope.[6]

George Medal

Jones's most widely remembered act of bravery came during the Bristol Blitz on the evening of 24 November 1940, when incendiary bombs fell on top of a large gas holder at St Philip's, also described in some reports as being at Barton Hill.[5][3][19] The holder stood within Bristol's principal gasworks district, where Avon Street and neighbouring installations formed part of a major concentration of industry in St Philip's.[7][8][9] Wartime bombing caused repeated disruption to production and distribution across the Bristol gas system, and an explosion at the Folly Lane holder would have threatened the densely built neighbourhoods of The Dings, St Philip's, and Barton Hill.[20][5][10]

Jones climbed the structure during the raid and dealt with the bombs by hand. Two incendiaries had lodged on the crown of the holder, and he climbed to the top and knocked them clear with his steel hat.[2] During the same raid, after bomb splinters punctured the holder, he repeatedly went out to find and temporarily stop the escaping gas, despite the attack still being at its height.[2] He was also credited with helping to extinguish a later fire at a badly punctured gas holder while off duty, before serious damage was done.[2][20] Contemporary and later accounts in the Bristol press broadly agree on the essentials of the episode, while later retellings added that he broke a toe while kicking one bomb clear and used clay to plug holes caused by splinters as he descended.[1][5][15][19]

For these actions he was awarded the George Medal in 1941.[1][2] In May that year he travelled to Buckingham Palace, where the medal was presented by King George VI.[6][3] Family members and friends later recalled that he remained embarrassed by the attention and said little about the incident. According to one account, after returning home he simply placed the medal in a drawer, where it remained for many years until his death.[5][10][14]

Later life and death

Legacy

References

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