Charity Bick
Charity Anne Bick GM (19 December 1924 – 22 April 2002) was a British civilian dispatch rider during the Second World War, and the youngest ever recipient of the George Medal, the United Kingdom's second-highest award for civilian bravery. She later served in the Women's Royal Air Force. BiographyCharity Anne Bick was born on 19 December 1924[1] and educated at Lyng Primary School in Horton Street, Lyng, West Bromwich.[2] At the age of 14, while living in Maud Road, West Bromwich[2] she lied about her age, claiming to be 16, to join the Air Raid Precautions (ARP) service[3] in that town. She volunteered at the office of a brick works near her home, delivering messages between ARP depots, by bicycle.[2] Her father was an ARP post warden.[4] During a 1940 air raid on West Bromwich, she helped her father to put out an incendiary bomb that had lodged in the roof of a shop. When the roof gave way, she fell through and suffered minor injuries.[3][4] Nonetheless, she then used a borrowed bicycle and made numerous attempts to deliver a message to the control room, one and a quarter miles away, avoiding bombs and shrapnel.[3] She made repeated trips, at least three of which occurred during the height of the raid.[3] Bick was awarded the George Medal (GM) for her bravery; the official citation, in The London Gazette of 14 February 1941, read:[3][4][5]
Aged 16, she was the youngest person ever to receive the GM.[2] The medal was presented to her by King George VI in a ceremony on 10 September 1941.[2] She also received the Defence Medal[6] and War Medal[7] at the end of the war. ![]() Bick went on to join the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, retiring in 1962 from its successor, the Women's Royal Air Force as a warrant officer, and having earned the Royal Air Force Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.[8] Her service number was 2109222.[8] Final years and legacyLater in her life, Bick lived in Inverness, Scotland.[9] She died there on 22 April 2002, age 77.[2][10] Her portrait, in oil, by Alfred Reginald Thomson, RA, is in the Imperial War Museum, London,[2][11] while her medals are on display at the Imperial War Museum North.[4][6][8] A blue plaque commemorating Bick was erected at Lyng Primary School, by the Lyng History Group, on 21 February 2002.[2][9] The school was presented with a replica set of her medals in March 2002.[2] Charity Bick Way in West Bromwich (52°30′52″N 1°59′53″W / 52.51432°N 1.99793°W) is named in her honour. References
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