What did flying bomb (V1/V2) white plaque do at Turk's Row?

Turk's RowBlue Plaque

The Story

# Turk's Row Memorial On the morning of July 3rd, 1944, a German V1 flying bomb screamed across London's Chelsea skyline and struck Sloane Court East, a residential building that housed American servicemen stationed in the city to coordinate the Allied invasion of Europe. In an instant, 74 U.S. Army personnel and three British civilians were killed—a devastating blow to the close-knit community of American military officers and support staff who had made this area their home away from home during the war effort. The men who died here had been preparing for and supporting Operation Overlord, some never having set foot on the Normandy beaches they were helping to liberate; others were technicians, administrators, and soldiers whose quiet work behind the scenes was just as vital to victory. Standing at Turk's Row today, this modest plaque serves as a poignant reminder that London's sacrifice during the Blitz extended far beyond its own citizens—it was a place where young American soldiers, far from their homes, became part of the city's tragic wartime story, their names forever bound to this corner of Chelsea where a single moment of destruction changed everything.

Location

Turk's Row

Discover more stories across London

Download on the App Store