Personal info
- Name: Donald FLETCHER
- D.O.B: 17th Jan, 1902
- D.O.A: 10th Sep, 1925
- D.O.D: 22nd Aug, 1986
- Award: Edward Medal translated to George Cross
- Occupation at time of action: Miner, Creswell Colliery, near Chesterfield, Derbyshire
- Book: The Complete History - Volume 3
BETWEEN THE WARS
1919-39
The stresses of the First World War led to political revolution in much of Europe and, in extreme cases, social collapse. Even the victors, Britain and France, were not immune to the economic upheaval and labour unrest resulting from the transition from war to peace and the demobilization of hundreds of thousands of men. This made them extremely nervous of the rise of the Bolsheviks in Russia and they decided to send aid to the anti-Bolshevik forces. However, an Allied North Russia Expeditionary Force had to be withdrawn once it became clear that internal opposition to the Bolsheviks had been defeated. In Britain a postwar boom failed to prove long-lasting and in May 1926 there was a General Strike, triggered by a crisis in the Mining Industry. The Great Depression followed in 1929 and by 1931 Britain was forced to abandon the Gold Standard. In large parts of the country and especially in the traditional industries there was widespread unemployment throughout the 1930s, symbolized by the Jarrow Crusade of 1936. Conditions were much worse on the Continent and the interwar period witnessed the rise of the Dictators. The coming to power in Germany of Hitler in 1933 was to lead inexorably to the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. In the years of increasingly uneasy peace between 1919 and September 1939 only eleven VCs were awarded and of these only one, the award to Captain G P Meynell in 1935, took place outside the period 1919-21. Of the eleven awards, five related to actions against the Bolsheviks, four to actions on the North-West Frontier of India and one to an an engagement in what is now Iraq. The remaining award was that in 1921 to the American Unknown Warrior. Of the Albert, Edward and Empire Gallantry Medals awarded in the same period, 142 recipients lived long enough for their awards to be converted to the GC. The geographical distribution of the actions that occasioned the awards is witness to the Global spread of the British Empire, which reached its widest extent after the First World War. However, some of the awards, for gallantry in India, Egypt and the Sudan, and Palestine, reflected both the stresses in maintaining that dominion and the duties it entailed. After service personnel and policemen, coal miners formed the largest group of recipients, demonstrating the central importance of coal to the British economy and the dangers inherent in securing it. Those who worked in coal and gold mines in India and Africa were also honoured. Both in the mines and in industry as a whole, the threat posed by poisonous gases led to many awards. New industries brought new hazards with them. Other dangers overcome were of a more basic sort. Awards were also made to those who, throughout the Empire, confronted mad elephants, rabid dogs and marauding sharks.
Citation
On September 10th, 1925, a heavy fall of roof to a depth of 16 feet took place at the Cresswell Colliery in Derbyshire completely burying a miner named Cooper. Some of the larger pieces of the roof became interlocked affording him some protection from the full weight of the fall and thus prevented his being crushed to death. Efforts were made to discover where Cooper lay and it was found that his head was near the edge of the fall so that it was possible to free it from debris. His shoulders were next freed but his body and legs were held fast. The only way in which Cooper could be extricated was that someone should crawl under the debris and by working a passage alongside and over Cooper release him very gradually and stone by stone. Fletcher at once volunteered for this task and was successful after two hours’ continuous work. Great patience and skill were required, and in the course of the work Fletcher’s body was completely under the fall with his head close to Cooper’s feet. Throughout the operation Fletcher was exposed to the risk of being crushed to death either by a second fall or by a settling down of the first fall, and he performed his task skilfully without regarding his own safety. Fletcher’s action was a very brave one involving great risk to his own life and, indeed, in the latter stages of the work his position was more dangerous than Cooper’s.
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