© MMXVI/MMXXII - McGeoch Technology Limited - All Rights Reserved
McGEOCH’S HERO WITH A
SMILE
Published 1st July 2021
On the night of 22nd November 1940 and through the early
hours of the following day during one of Birmingham’s worst
WWII blitzes, incendiaries rained around the Coventry Road
Works of McGeoch & Company Limited, electrical engineers
and brassfounders. Some fell on piles of timber which
blazed fiercely.
Among
the
first
to
tackle
the
menace
was
Mr
Walter
Heath,
then
aged
58
of
Westridge
Road,
King’s
Heath.
He
and
a
fellow
employee, William Greene, brought the fire under control.
Soon
after
it
was
discovered
that
another
fire
bomb
had
penetrated
the
roof
of
a
storeroom
on
the
top
floor
of
the
works.
To
tackle
it,
hose
had
to
be
run
up
a
dark
and
winding
staircase and the jet operated in a small and congested area.
It
took
an
hour
to
get
that
fire
under
control
but
worse
was
yet
to
come.
Just
as
Walter
and
his
exhausted
helpers
had
extinguished
the
last
sparks,
there
was
an
ominous
roar.
An
oil
bomb
had
fallen
in
an
adjoining
yard,
setting
fire
to
a
pile
of
timber
and
the
outbuilding
right
next
to
the
works
Walter
was
protecting.
Two
jets
were
directed
from
opposite
sides
of
the
blaze
but
were
inadequate.
It
was
necessary
to
direct
a
jet
down
onto
the
roof
of
the
outbuilding
if
the
works
was
to
be
saved.
So
Walter
clambered
up
onto
the
first
flat
roof
of
the
works
and,
with
his
hose
running
up
the
side
of
the
wall,
he
stood
for
seven
long
hours
fighting
the
flames
while
high
explosives
fell
all
around
him.
For
the
first
hour
of
this
ordeal,
he
and
William
Greene
worked
alone
as
assistance
could
not
be
spared,
but
the works were saved.
For
that
memorable
exploit,
Walter
was
awarded
an
OBE.
Not
only
was
he
a
hero
that
night,
he
held
a
firm
place
in
the
regard
of
his
fellow
workers
and
his
employers
for
whom
he
had
worked
for
42
years.
That
regard
had
been
won
by
his
unfailing cheerfulness, integrity and devotion to duty.
Walter’s
main
job
in
the
McGeoch
factory
was
making
brass
lamp
fitting.
He
made
them
for
the
old‘multi-masted
‘Windjammers’,
more
modern
cruise
liners,
hotels
and
cinemas.
He
also
made
special
standard
fittings
for
Sandringham House in Norfolk.
At
the
outbreak
of
WWII,
Walter
was
the
first
McGeoch
employee
to
join
the
LDV
unit
and
was
a
member
of
the
Home
Guard
until
the
war
ended.
He
held
the
curious
distinction
of
beaming
a
corporal
in
the
Home
Guard
and
Captain
of
the
works fire brigade.
Walter
had
many
hobbies
including
photography,
entomology,
and
motoring
but
spent
all
his
spare
time
in
his
beloved
garden.
Top:
McGeoch’s
Walter
Heath
(centre)
with
his
OBE
following
the
presentation
at
Buckingham
Palace
by
King
George
VI
in
March
1941.
Above:
The
buttons
and
badges
from
Fire
Captain Walter’s uniform.