Marbles that led to Dambusters raid fetch £15,000

Two glass marbles that were used to help design the RAF's "bouncing bombs" have sold for £15,200 after a bidding war.

The marbles

The marbles (Image: Auctioneum Ltd / SWNS)

Sir Barnes Wallis used a catapult to fire his daughter Mary’s marbles along a bath of water in his garden to work out the trajectory needed to skim his invention over nets and blow up Nazi dams, in 1943.

The Second World War raid by Lancaster bomber crews was immortalised in 1955 hit film The Dam Busters. Bristol auction Auctioneum said the small glass toys had a “gigantic” importance.

Sir Barnes Wallis

Sir Barnes Wallis (Image: Popperfoto via Getty Images/Getty Images)

There were more than 20 bidders from five countries.

The hammer price was £15,200 - £18,300 with fees.

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