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More than 170 WWII bombs found under children’s playground during construction at UK park

More than 170 WWII bombs found under children’s playground during construction at UK park


More than 170 bombs dating back to World War II were discovered under a children’s playground in England last month when workers began digging up the park for renovations, according to officials.

The explosive find was first made in mid-January at Scotts Park in Wooler, Northumberland in an area that was likely used as a training base during the war. After the global conflict ended, the bombs were buried, according to a report.   

 “It’s quite something to think the children have been playing on bombs and it’s been a really challenging situation,” Wooler councilor Mark Mather told the BBC.


More than 170 World War II bombs found under children's playground in England
More than 170 World War II bombs were found under children’s playgrounds in England. Wooler Parish Council

Initially, one suspicious object was found while workers were ripping up ground that turned out to be an old training bomb, according to the outlet.

Then more bombs were unearthed by the dozens with the “scale of the problem far greater than anyone has anticipated” after a specialized business was brought in to investigate, according to the town’s parish council.

Another 65 10-pound practice bombs – that carry a charge — and smoke cartridges were located one day in a pit and then 90 more practice bombs were dug up a day later in the same pit, officials said.

So far, 176 bombs have been found – and the excavation is ongoing, the BBC reported.

“We’ve only cleared about a third of all the park and we could still find another pit with more bombs in,” Mather said, according to BBC.


The explosive find was first made in mid-January at Scotts Park in Wooler, Northumberland in an area that was likely used as a training base during the war. After the global conflict ended, the bombs were buried
The explosive find was first made in mid-January at Scotts Park in Wooler, Northumberland in an area that was likely used as a training base during the war. After the global conflict ended, the bombs were buried. Mark Mather

“I never thought as a parish councilor I’d be dealing with bomb disposal,” he added.

The park was supposed to add an all-inclusive playground to the current setup before the underground bombs threw a grenade into the plans.

“They are called practice bombs so they’re not live,” Mather said, “but they do still carry a charge and were found with the fuse and contents intact so they could be hazardous.”

More work at the site is expected to drag through the middle of February. 

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