GHOST STATIONS™ The Story

GHOST STATIONS™ The Story ... True Ghost - Mystery Stories by Bruce Barrymore Halpenny

Published by: L'AQUILA (ANZIO Group)       Price: £9.95 each

200 pages and around 69 Photographs/Illustrations

ISBN-13: 978-1-871448-09-2

Lincolnshire was bomber country during the Second World War and bore the brunt of the airborne offensive against the Third Reich. Its title of Bomber County is rightly given and held with pride. Many are the famous names and squadrons that operated from this region, and many, many, the stories of courage, dedication and determination.


GHOST STATIONS™ The Story Book Contents

  • Copyright and Warning Notice
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • A Patriotic Poem
  • Bless 'Em All
  • So What Is Folk-Lore?
  • Wartime Memories
  • The Nonstops Troop Show
  • Dark Secrets
  • The Telepathy Incident
  • A Wartime Incident
  • Dishonoured Disowned
  • The Man Who Never Was
  • The Haunted Bomber
  • The Haunted Road
  • The Ghost Crews Return
  • By A Strange Coincidence
  • The Vanishing 3,000
  • Strange Happenings At RAF Soerabaja
  • The Headless Ghosts
  • Was It A Warning?
  • The Memorial
  • 21st Century Interview
  • A Letter From An Ardent Fan
  • One Of The Reasons Why The Old Airfields Are Haunted
  • Book Signings & Interviews
  • One Who Writes Poems
  • To The Men of The Bombers
  • A Night To Remember
  • The Air Show
  • My Thoughts During A Raid
  • Colonel Thomas Blood
  • Major, The Earl of Ancaster, K.C.V.O; T.D.
  • Knights of The Round Table
  • What If ...?
  • Glossary
  • Down Memory Lane
  • Copyright and Warning Notice


Wartime Memories


Betty Hockey has many memories from those far off wartime days. Betty and her Nonstops Troop Show gave over 1,000 concert shows to forces under Southern Command and, they did a marvellous job during those dark days. Betty had a daytime war job of driving a van around the area, collecting used tyres for recycling ...

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Memories
Ghost Stations™ The Story

The Ghost Crews Return


First used during the First World War when it was called Harpswell after the small hamlet that lay at the southern end of the airfield. After the First World War the site was reclaimed for agricultural use and all traces of the airfield were soon eradicated ... but not the ghosts ...

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Ghosts
Ghost Stations™ The Story