[guide.chat] eavacuees true story

  • From: vanessa <qwerty1234567a@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "GUIDE CHAT" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2012 07:46:59 +0100

Operation Pied Piper

The evacuation of Britain's cities at the start of World War Two was the 
biggest and most concentrated mass movement of people in Britain's history. In 
the first four days of September 1939, nearly 3,000,000 people were transported 
from towns and cities in danger from enemy bombers to places of safety in the 
countryside.

Most were schoolchildren, who had been labelled like pieces of luggage, 
separated from their parents and accompanied instead by a small army of 
guardians - 100,000 teachers. By any measure it was an astonishing event, a 
logistical nightmare of co-ordination and control beginning with the terse 
order to 'Evacuate forthwith,' issued at 11.07am on Thursday, 31 August 1939. 
Few realised that within a week, a quarter of the population of Britain would 
have a new address.

Talking to evacuees now about the events of those days in 1939 recalls painful 
memories that have been deeply hidden for 60 years, exposing the trauma of 
separation and isolation and the tensions of fear and anger. Most were unaware 
of where they were going, what they would be doing and all were wholly ignorant 
of when they would be coming back.

The fear of air attack from German bombers at the start of hostilities 
encouraged parents to send their children to safety. There were predictions of 
4,000,000 civilian casualties in London alone, and, as early as 1922 - after 
the air threat from Zeppelins - Lord Balfour had spoken of 'unremitting 
bombardment of a kind that no other city has ever had to endure'.

The Government had stockpiled coffins, erected masses of barrage balloons and 
planned, at least in outline, for the mass evacuation of British cities before 
1939. But it is now revealed that these plans were hopelessly flawed.

In the first place, the estimates of casualties were grossly over-exaggerated 
and the subsequent Government propaganda caused near panic rather than 
controlled movement. In addition, the man in charge of evacuation, Sir John 
Anderson, was a cold, inhuman character with little understanding of the 
emotional upheaval that might be created by evacuation.

Top
The day of evacuation

For some children used to city life, the countryside proved to be a revelation  
© Most evacuees have a vivid recall of events on the day of their evacuation. 
The images are of busy train stations, shouting officials and sobbing mothers.

In London, the schoolchildren sang 'The Lambeth Walk'. Elsewhere there were 
choruses of 'Wish Me Luck as You Wave Me Goodbye'. For most it was 'like going 
on an adventure': a phrase that is still uppermost in the minds of evacuees 60 
years on.

'We marched to Waterloo Station behind our head teacher carrying a banner with 
our school's name on it,' says James Roffey, founder of the Evacuees Reunion 
Association. 'We all thought it was a holiday, but the only thing we couldn't 
work out was why the women and girls were crying.'

For the newspapers the evacuation represented an irresistible human story. An 
upper-class Englishwoman, Mollie Panter-Downes, described the scene in her 
fortnightly piece for the New Yorker and remarked on the 'cheerful little 
cockneys who could hardly believe the luck that was sending them to the 
countryside'.

The stereotypical images were already forming in people's minds.

Parents gave instructions to their children: 'Don't complain,' 'Grin and bear 
it,' 'Look after your sister,' 'Write home as soon as you can.'

Broadly speaking the four-day official exodus worked surprisingly well. The 
real problems came in the reception areas where the Government had left 
arrangements for the children's arrival and care to local authorities, with 
little more than an injunction to do their best.

The result can only be described as a typically British wartime shamble. 
Hundreds of children arrived in the wrong area with insufficient rations. And, 
more worryingly, there were not enough homes in which to put them.

Twelve months earlier, the Government had surveyed available housing, but what 
they had not taken into account was the extent to which middle-class and 
well-to-do families would be making their own private arrangements. 
Consequently, those households who had previously offered to take in evacuees 
were now full.

Keeping control of the whole thing became a joyless task. 'The trains were 
coming in thick and fast,' says Geoffrey Barfoot who had been seconded from the 
town hall to act as a billeting officer in Weston Super Mare. 'It was soon 
obvious that we just didn't have the bed space.'

Top
I'll Take that One

As a result of the mismatches, selection was made according to rudimentary 
principles. Billeting officers simply lined the children up against a wall or 
on a stage in the village hall, and invited potential hosts to take their pick. 
Thus the phrase 'I'll take that one' became etched on the memory of our 
evacuees.

Steve Davis, a clinical psychologist specialising in the study of war trauma, 
says this was the first of many moments that caused upset and humiliation for 
the evacuees and put their welfare under serious threat. 'It was little more 
than a paedophile's charter', says Davis, whose work involves counselling 
former evacuees.

For him the current anniversary marks a watershed. 'Surveys show that childhood 
memories lie dormant for a period of around 60 years and now they are returning 
to haunt people in a big way.'

Understandably perhaps, those with only good evacuations cherish their 
memories, and are irritated by those who seem only to recall the gloomier side. 
The unhappiness of others somehow besmirches their own idyllic picture.

However, contrasting experiences have stayed with the evacuees and what is left 
can only be described as the best of times and the worst of times.

Rita Glenister, from North London, stayed with a working-class family in 
Somerset and was treated like a member of the family, given love and affection 
and secured friendships to last a lifetime. Norma Reeve, from a lowly 
background in the East End, was taken in by a titled lady with servants and a 
butler who served Norma her meals.

Little things, like going to the pictures, learning to bake bread, walks in the 
woods and the generosity of those who took evacuated children into their homes, 
have remained constant in the minds of evacuees. For many it was a 
life-enhancing, mind-broadening experience, leaving them with memories they 
treasure to this day.

Others, however, were beaten, mistreated and abused by families who didn't want 
them and didn't care about them. The painful experience of John Abbot, 
evacuated from Bristol, reflects the darker side. His rations were stolen by 
his host family, who enjoyed good food whilst John was given a diet of nothing 
more than mashed potatoes.

He was horsewhipped for speaking out and, with a bruised and bleeding body, was 
eventually taken in by the police. Then there was Terri McNeil who was locked 
in a birdcage and left with a chunk of bread and a bowl of water.

Of course, it would be wrong to suppose that evacuation under the government 
scheme was one long misery for most of those involved. Clearly it was only a 
minority that were ill-treated, but it did happen. The present writer spoke 
directly to nearly 450 ex-evacuees, and of these 12 per cent say they suffered 
some sort of mental, physical or specifically sexual abuse, as defined by the 
children's welfare organisations of today. Naturally, and sadly, deep scars lie 
just below the surface for that minority.

Top
Daily Mirror's coverage

Saturday, 2 September 1939

No hitch on great adventure

Evacuation of schoolchildren from London went without a hitch. The children, 
smiling and cheerful, left their parents and entrained for unknown destinations 
in the spirit of going on a great adventure.

'I wish all our passengers were as easy to manage,' a railway official said. 
'The children were very well behaved.'

At Waterloo, 80 per cent of the normal travellers saw nothing of the 
schoolchildren. After Earl de la Warr, President of the Board of Education, had 
toured a number of schools in West London, he said, 'If the arrangements at the 
other end for receiving the children are as good as at this end, it bodes well 
for the scheme.'

Waiting rooms, turned into first-aid posts at various stations for the 
children, were rarely if ever used.

First school to start

Earliest school to start evacuation was Myrdle Street School, Commercial Road, 
E. Two hundred children, aged from three to 13, assembled before dawn. Each 
child carried a gas mask, food and change of clothing and bore three labels. 
'Don't suck or eat your labels,' the head teacher, Miss DL Herbert, told them.

Freda Skrzypee, nine, who arrived with her parents and brother from Danzig on 
Sunday was among them. She speaks no English, but has a companion in Ruth 
Rosenzweig, Jewish refugee from Berlin. 'The Germans have taken away our 
nationality,' she said, 'But I am happy here.'

While waiting to be taken away - they did not know where they were going, 
except 'to the country for a holiday' - the children had community singing. As 
dawn was breaking the children marched to Aldgate Metropolitan Station, where 
they entrained.

At the Ben Johnson School, Mile End, E, mothers were allowed into the 
playground where 300 boys and girls said a bright 'cheerio' to their mothers. 
Then Mr HC Cawsey told the parents: 'Your children will be safe. Remember Mr 
Morrison's message and smile!'

Top
Daily Mirror; part two

Saturday, 2 September 1939

And they did smile

A teacher cheerily told a father: 'We'll be back in a week. The weather's 
glorious for a nice holiday.'

Organisation was so good that a quarter of an hour after the assembly the 
children were ready to move.

Not one of the 250 children was late at Mandeville Street School, Lower 
Clapton. Once inside their buses they talked happily with their parents through 
the windows. 'Got your comics, Bert?' shouted a fond father. Bert had them all 
right, with his gas mask.

The evacuation went off with remarkable smoothness.

Within eleven minutes after the arrival by District Railway at Wimbledon, 500 
children from Merton Road School (Southfields) and Wandsworth School were in a 
main line train station on their way to an undisclosed destination.

It was a brave little regiment, marching in step, which left Ashburnham School, 
Lots Road, Chelsea, for Walham Green Station where they entrained for 
Wimbledon. One thousand children are being evacuated from the Chelsea area.

The dexterity with which the children were shepherded through crowds of morning 
workers at Waterloo Station was a perfect piece of organisation. Police wearing 
armlets and LCC school officials saw that an avenue to their platform was kept 
entirely free for the children.

Little tots smiled gleefully and boys whistled and exchanged jokes. One boy, 
carrying a kitbag over his shoulder in true military style, kept humming to 
himself as he marched along.

'Cheer up. Your children are going to have a happy holiday and don't worry.' 
With these words of cheer Miss Violet Horseburgh, Parliamentary Secretary to 
the Minister of Health, comforted mothers outside the Vauxhall Central School, 
Lawn Lane, South Lambeth Road.

One little boy at Ealing Broadway Station, where 50,000 children entrained, had 
a bucket and spade with him. To cheer him up his mother had told him that he 
was going to the seaside. Actually, she did not know his destination.

Ten thousand children left New Cross Gate Southern Station.

Mr E Kingston of Vansittart Road, New Cross, who saw two of his children leave 
on the train said, 'It is the only sensible thing to do. I am not worrying.'

Hospital evacuation too, went off smoothly. Along the blue-windowed corridors 
of Saint Thomas's Hospital, past the carriage which Florence Nightingale used 
in the Crimea, teams of medical students wheeled patients (who still require 
medical treatment but are not seriously ill) in their beds to two centres, 
where they were transferred to stretchers.

Two fathers arrived and carried their newly born babies from the wards to the 
ambulance. Bernard Cooke (of Cornwall Street, Victoria), proud father of 
Patrick Joseph, who weighed 9lb, 14oz at his birth a week ago, said:

'I am sorry to lose my wife and boy. It's my first baby, you know, but I think 
it's wiser that they should go away.'

The bed patients - 70 in number - were evacuated from Charing Cross Hospital in 
an hour. 'Goodbye, nurse. I'll see you soon,' called one of the younger women. 
'Of course you will. You will be back next week,' was the nurse's rejoinder. 
Many babies were among the first batch of patients removed from Guy's hospital.

Top
Daily Mirror: part three

Saturday, 2 September 1939

Evacuation plans going smoothly

Great progress has been made with the first part of the Government's evacuation 
arrangements in England, says a statement issued by the Minister of Health. The 
statement goes on: 'The railways, road transport organisations, local 
authorities and teachers and the voluntary workers in the reception areas are 
all playing their part splendidly.'

'Evacuation will continue. The time that it will take to complete will vary in 
different areas.'

'Evacuation of school children will continue in areas where it is not already 
completed.'

'This will be followed by evacuation of young children accompanied by their 
mothers or by some other responsible person, expectant mothers, blind and any 
cripples who have received instructions that they will be moved.'

'By this time all these persons in these special classes in the different areas 
ought to have been informed by their local authorities where to assemble and 
the day and time at which to be there.'

'If any of you in these classes are in doubt you should at once make inquiries 
at your local council office.'

'Arrangements for the first day were limited to those areas for which transport 
plans have been previously worked out. It has already been possible to extend 
the arrangements to a few other areas.'

'Evacuation form Grimsby and Cleethorpes will continue on Saturday and Sunday. 
Evacuation form Derby will take place on Saturday and Sunday; from Coventry on 
Sunday and Monday.'

'All persons included in the Government evacuation scheme who are in receipt of 
State pensions or allowances should take their pension and allowance books with 
them, even if the book has just expired.'

'They will be able to draw their pensions and allowances from the nearest Post 
Office if they present the book.'

'Pensioners who at present get their books from a pension officer and not a 
Post Office, should get from the Post Office in the new area the address of the 
local Pensions Officer.'

As a further precautionary measure the Minister of Health has sent instructions 
to hospitals in the casualty organisation to send home all patients who are fit 
to be sent home. Similar arrangements have been made in Scotland.

Orders for the transfer of stretcher cases from inner to outer hospitals were 
issued yesterday.


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