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A question about evacuation during WW2

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Peter

Peter Report 14 May 2007 00:14

Dizzy, The evacuees and local children were not deliberately segregated at school: it was simply the effect of having to accommodate the children from two schools (and their teachers) in one. So both sets of children went on half-time and for perfectly understandable reasons they stayed in their classes with the teachers they were familar with. By the way, Deb, there is plenty of material on this subject but it does come in book form. Peter

Devon Dweller

Devon Dweller Report 13 May 2007 23:59

Benjamin My Great Grandmother was in Camden and she was in her 70's. she didn't get officially evacuated but did eventually move out to the middlesex area.

David

David Report 13 May 2007 23:40

My mother, who was pregnant with my sister and I were evacuated to Manor Farm, Tarring Neville, between Lewes and Newhaven, on 6 Sept 1939, three days after war was declared. I was aged about 18 months. My aunt and her two children also went there at the same time. My cousin has recently found her mum's billeting ticket, which showed the rent as 11/- per week. My sister has recently found a letter dated 1941, from my Dad's sister who died of cancer that same year. In it she says that my grandfather wanted my grandmother to go to relatives in Oxford to escape the bombing, but she refused to leave London. (Bermondsey.) They were eventually bombed out rhe end of the war by a V1 or V2, not sure which. My grandmother always refused to leave the flats for the shelter, but on that evening she did, and survived.

Juliet

Juliet Report 13 May 2007 20:10

if anyone was evacuated to bethesda/bangor area.I'm willing to help with finding photos,addresses etc

Deb needs a change

Deb needs a change Report 12 May 2007 12:36

Thanks orange cat, I'll go and have a look. Sounds interesting. Deb:)

Orange Cat and Me

Orange Cat and Me Report 12 May 2007 12:34

The Imperial war museum has a lot on civilians and especially evacuees. Just had a look at iwm(.)org(.)uk and searched 'evacuees' there is quite a bit there including Wales. OC&G

Dizzy

Dizzy Report 12 May 2007 10:22

My Nan who was living in Muswell Hill, London took her 3 children and a neice to Wales during the war, it was arranged my Grandad who was based in Wales in the army. They lived in a shared cottage very near to the Army base. They all tell tales of happy times there. We went back there for a family holiday when I was small (in the 70's) and saw the school, cottage, army base etc. We ended up living there a few years later and I met my husband (now Ex) in the place that was one the army cook house where my Grandad was working (it's now a pub). He went to the same tiny school that my mum had gone to and we got married in the village that the army camp was in. One of the 'old men' of the village told us that he remembered the army arriving, all marching down the road into their tiny village and beyond to other postings! My Dad didn't have such a good time when he was evacuated, he was badly treated by one family and he missed him Mum terribly. He says that the 'London' kids were kept seperate from the 'local' kids, one lot going to school in the morning and the others in the afternoon.

Deb needs a change

Deb needs a change Report 12 May 2007 10:12

Thanks Marie, It looks like my relative was probably evacuated to Wales then as she was pregnant in 1940. I always wondered why she went to Wales. Deb:)

Marie

Marie Report 12 May 2007 09:55

yes Deb, People were evacuated to wales. My aunt and her friend, both teachers in London schools, were sent with groups of their pupils to South Wales in the war. My mother , then living in Middlesex, after some horrific bombing near by, took herself (then 6 months pregnan)t and her four other children and her blind father on the long journey by train to Wales to where her sister was staying. We were there for two years.I was two and a half when we went and have very clear memories of that time in Wales. M

Deb needs a change

Deb needs a change Report 12 May 2007 09:45

Hi Benjamin, From what I've been reading on-line, only pregnant women, children and the blind were evacuated by the government. But as you can see from the replies on this thread, many people evacuated under their own steam. Deb:)

Benjamin

Benjamin Report 12 May 2007 09:39

My gg grandfather in Camden Town, London was in his early 80s in 1940 during the Blitz and his wife, my gg gran was 77, but she died in 1943 and he lived until 1947. Would they have been evacuated during WW2 at all, was it people of all ages? Ben

Charles

Charles Report 12 May 2007 01:50

My mother and uncle were evacuated from Manchester to Uttoxeter. My mother lived with a farmer and his family and absolutely loved it. My mother stayed in touch for many years and, when I was around 16, I was taken to see the family. My mother was welcomed by the farmer's sons as if she were their sister. We often hear bad stories about evacuation. But there were very many good ones.

Paul Barton, Special Agent

Paul Barton, Special Agent Report 12 May 2007 00:49

My mother was evacuated to Wales and tells how the children were lined up on the Welsh station platform and picked as if they were being chosen for a game of football. Later on in the war my mother and her younger brother were brought back to London so the family could be reunited.

Gwyn in Kent

Gwyn in Kent Report 11 May 2007 23:40

I have seen log books from a Dover school from when it's children were evacuated to south Wales. Host families name was mentioned, plus age and name of evacuee and duration of stay. If they moved elsewhere from their host, that was noted too. Private arrangements were not logged as such, although I was able to trace my brother's time at the village school in Wales from an old school log book. Gwyn

Deb needs a change

Deb needs a change Report 11 May 2007 23:40

I have to pop out for a while but will check back in a few hours. This is a really interesting topic and I'm starting to get a picture of what it must have been like during this time frame. Deb:)

Devon Dweller

Devon Dweller Report 11 May 2007 23:30

I doubt that theres much Deb. Like Gwyneth said many people did it off their own back. 3 of my younger aunts were evacuated and my Nan and the older ones followed them just so that they could keep the family together. I don't think it was a very uncommon decision to do this. Sheila

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it Report 11 May 2007 23:29

MY OH with his Mum and bro & sister went to Torquay too after being sent to Kent in the early part of WW2. I was only 2½ in 1939 when i was evacuated to Kent and I bonded with my step mum ,so much so that i really didn't want to go 'home' in Jan 1946.My foster parents wanted to adopt me and it was heartbreaking for me to go 'home'. I left being the baby and returned with three younger siblings that i didn't know and a mum & dad that i knew were mine but i loved my 'auntie'more I still retained my contact with my foster Mum and her OH after he came home from the War.and they had their only child .a daughter, in 1949. We are like sisters and STILL in contact. Evacuation tore many families apart,and many of the evacuees had a very hard time in the temporary homes.not wanted and in some cases abused. I was lucky as well as my elder sis & bro and younger one too .we were well treated Shirley

Deb needs a change

Deb needs a change Report 11 May 2007 23:28

I was reading that over 3 million people were evacuated between 1939 -1940 from major cities. So that number must be much higher if evacuations continued up to 1943 and possibly later. I wonder if there would be a list of peoples names/dates/destinations etc..... Deb:)

Gwyn in Kent

Gwyn in Kent Report 11 May 2007 23:22

Wales was considered a safer region than the industrial areas of England.It was further away from front line bombing. My mother took herself off to South Wales with my brother so that she could stay with relatives and get away from the bombing in the Portsmouth area. There were more organised public schemes but many people made their own arrangements if they knew someone in a safer area. Gwyn

Nickydownsouth

Nickydownsouth Report 11 May 2007 23:11

Its strange the way families were seperated through evacuation, my mother then age 14 was evacuated to Wales with her mother, her brother who was only 18 months older went to Torquay, my grandmother was only in her early thirties, how awful it must have been to have one your children move so far away from you, and not really be sure when youll see them again. Nicky