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    Home » Tunnels below New Brighton arcade became secret wartime factory
    World

    Tunnels below New Brighton arcade became secret wartime factory

    saiphnewsBy saiphnewsMay 11, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Unknown A group of women work in a makeshift munitions factory beneath the arcade in New Brighton, Merseyside. They are dressed in work overcoats and have their hair tied up or under headscarves as they operate machinery making bullets and shell casings. Unknown

    Up to 200 women worked in the underground munitions factory beneath New Brighton’s amusement arcade

    Even at the height of World War Two, the women who worked at New Brighton’s amusement arcade turned up for their shifts as usual.

    Only they were no longer there to sell tickets, run the stalls, or to serve seaside snacks in the cafe.

    Rather, they were there to toil in a secret underground factory producing millions of bullets and shell casings for the war effort.

    Later this year, the tunnels below the original Art Deco arcade in the Merseyside seaside resort will open to the public as a museum.

    The factory become so important to the war effort that, after a 1944 concert at the nearby Liverpool Empire, Dame Vera Lynn showed her appreciation for the factory’s women by singing for them.

    Thankfully for the Allies – including the US forces who took over the ground floor in 1943 as an ordnance base – knowledge of the factory was a closely guarded secret.

    A Luftwaffe aircrew bombing map, uncovered by local historian Cathy Roberts, shows that Nazi Germany was totally unaware of what was really going on inside the Wilkie arcade.

    “With all the shells and fuel in there, if it had been hit it would have taken out most of New Brighton,” she said.

    The light blue exterior of New Brighton's arcade. It is an Art Deco building built in the late 1930s. It has shutters down over the doors.

    The Art Deco arcade was opened in 1939 and remains open to this day

    The New Palace Amusement Centre, next to the Floral Pavilion, was opened by Whilma Howe “Will” Wilkie in August 1939, at a cost equivalent to nearly £1m in today’s money.

    But within a matter of weeks, fun was the last thing on anyone’s mind.

    On 3 September, Britain declared war on Germany, which had invaded Poland two days before.

    Wilkie answered the call from the government for safe and secretive places that could be used for the war effort.

    The 100-year-old tunnels were cleared of sand, debris and stalactites and converted into an underground munitions factory.

    Many of the women who had worked on the dodgem cars, shooting galleries and bagatelles went to work below ground making the ammunition.

    The arcade’s manager became the factory’s foreman.

    With more than 100 acres of tunnels, there was plenty of space in which the women could work.

    Each week, they made more than 250,000 bullets and as many shell cases.

    Cathy Roberts A box of US Army rations and other equipment, including canned food, a French dictionary, and a baseball catcher's mitt.Cathy Roberts

    The US personnel who arrived to work at the arcade came well-supplied

    In 1943, the arcade building would become even more crucial to the war effort.

    In preparation for the Allied invasion of occupied Europe, US forces arrived in New Brighton.

    The ever-enterprising Wilkie once again answered the call to action, converting the ground floor of the arcade into a base for American engineers and technicians.

    Because the Americans’ army vehicles and trucks were shipped in flat-pack form, they had to be assembled on Merseyside.

    As a result, the New Brighton arcade became US Ordnance depot O_616.

    To make way for the US servicemen, the ground floor was cleared, with all the rides, stalls and attractions being moved out into the car park.

    To this day, the outdoor area is still home to fairground attractions.

    “Wilkie was quite canny,” said Ms Roberts. “So he kept promoting the amusement arcade with press advertisements so no-one would think it was anything else.”

    Cathy Roberts A present-day photograph of the tunnels where women had worked making munitions during the war. Some of the machinery remains in place. Cathy Roberts

    Some of the equipment used by the women in the factory was left behind after the war

    From the June 1944 D-Day landings onwards, the building continued to play a vital role.

    US Army vehicles damaged on Omaha Beach during the Normandy invasion were shipped back and repaired in the arcade.

    And the advancing Allies relied upon the bullets and shells that were continuing to be produced by the women working in the munitions factory below.

    Many traces of the factory survive to this day, and the arcade remains in the Wilkie family, with Whilma’s grandson David at the helm.

    Ms Roberts and other volunteers have been working to turn it into a museum to honour and remember the efforts made by everyone who worked there during the war.

    It opened to the public on Thursday’s 80th anniversary of VE Day.

    The ticketed tour, with free entry for service personnel, was sold out.

    Ms Roberts said she hoped the museum would become a popular attraction when it reopens later in 2025.

    “We always knew this place was important to the war effort,” she said. “But over the years we have learned just how important it was.”

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