
Primary school is evacuated after pupil brings hand grenade in for 'show-and-tell' assembly - sparking panic, with Army experts called in
The youngster unexpectedly produced the WW2 explosive device at Osmaston CofE Primary School in Ashbourne, Derbyshire - causing shock among staff.
Head teacher Jeanette Hart said she was 'unsure if the grenade was live' - so took it from the boy and placed it behind a 'substantial' tree in the school's car park while the emergency services were called.
Army experts later established the grenade was safe, but police praised the 'quick-thinking' staff.
Mrs Hart said: 'It was quite an eventful assembly. It was going fine and there was a boy who brought an old bullet case in, which I knew about, but then his friend produced a hand grenade from his pocket. That, I was not expecting.'
Mrs Hart told the BBC she 'tried to avoid a panic' when she realised the pupil was holding the grenade - a family heirloom he had picked up without telling his parents.
She said: 'It looked old and I thought it might be safe but I didn't want to take the risk.
'I ended the assembly, took it off him and slowly carried it outside and put it behind a far tree in the car park. I wasn't 100 percent happy carrying it to be honest.'
The school's headteacher Jeanette Hart said she was 'unsure if the grenade was live' and so 'slowly carried it outside' while the school was evacuated and the emergency services called
Students were moved to safety while police and army explosive experts were called to the scene.
Mrs Hart said: 'The children didn't really know what was going on but they knew something was different and they were excited because they saw the police and because they were playing out when they would have been in school.'
Derbyshire Police said army explosives experts determined the grenade was safe using X-ray equipment.
A spokesman for the Matlock, Cromford, Wirksworth and Darley Dale Police Safer Neighbourhood Team added: 'We even got to see those (X-ray) images and (were) told a detailed analysis of how there was nothing that would set the grenade off.
'Just a word of guidance for parents and guardians - double check what your kids are taking to show-and-tell, especially when they are family heirlooms.'
Mrs Hart said she had had 'a little chat' with the boy after the drama.
'It was entirely innocent,' she added. 'I don't think he ever really knew what it was.
'We'd been talking about VE Day and he knew it was from the war and just thought it was an interesting thing.
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