After their surrender, a large group of soldiers from the 2nd Battalion,
Royal Warwickshire Regiment, 4th Battalion
Cheshire Regiment, and gunners of the 210 Battery,
53rd (The Worcestershire Yeomanry) Anti-Tank Regiment,
Royal Artillery as well as
French soldiers in charge of a military depot were taken to a barn in
La Plaine au Bois near
Wormhout and
Esquelbecq on 28 May 1940. The Allied troops had become increasingly alarmed at the brutal conduct of the SS soldiers en route to the barn, which included the shooting of a number of wounded stragglers. On arrival at the barn the most senior British officer in the group, Captain James Lynn-Allen, protested, but was immediately rebuked by an SS soldier. When there were nearly 100 men inside the small barn, soldiers from the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, threw
stick-grenades into the building, killing many POWs, including
Charles Orton, a captain in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. The grenades failed to kill everyone, largely due to the actions of two British
NCOs,
Sergeant Stanley Moore and
CSM Augustus Jennings, who hurled themselves on top of the grenades using their bodies to suppress the force of the explosion and shield their comrades from the blast. Upon realising this, the SS called for two groups of five to come out. The first five included Pte Arthur Johnson and Private Bennett. The men came out and were shot. Despite being shot, Private Johnson and Gunner
Brian Fahey survived, unknown to the SS men at the time. Concluding that these methods were too slow, the SS troopers simply fired into the barn with their weapons. Several British prisoners were able to escape, while a few others, like Fahey, were left for dead. Captain Lynn-Allen died while trying to escape, although he enabled Private Bert Evans to escape; Evans was the last survivor of the massacre. A total of 80 men were killed. While 15 more were wounded, their wounds were so severe that within 48 hours all but six of them had died. After a couple of days, Johnson and Fahey and several others were found by regular
German Army medics and taken to hospital. Their wounds were treated before they were sent to prisoner of war camps in
occupied Europe. ==Legacy==