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Picture 'borrowed' from BBC Schools Web Pages
Evacuees
The Evacuation was an extraordinary achievement, but it was
certainly not without problems. Hundreds of children arrived in the
wrong places and in some areas there were insufficient host families
to look after all the children. Then there was the emotional
trauma experienced by many children, which often began when they
were lined up in the local village hall for selection.
Thereafter evacuee children had contrasting experiences: some
enjoyed happy, care-free times with a second family; but for others
evacuation remained a painful experience and, for some, a time of
mistreatment.
Olive Shapley of the BBC interviewed these evacuees near Manchester
for a programme broadcast in September 1939 called 'We have been
evacuated'.
Transcript:
We took our recording van last week to a small, Lancashire mill town
about 15 miles from Manchester and found, almost without exception,
that the children there were happy, excited by their new life and
pleased with the new friends they were making. When we arrived the
streets were given over to children: the high school girls
sauntering arm-in-arm up the main street in their tidy, brown
uniforms; children playing football in the steep, cobbled,
side-streets; children going shopping for their new mothers;
children making friends with policemen and ARP wardens. We finally
fixed on a crowd of children from one of Manchester's central
schools, who were leaning over a wall hopefully looking for fish in
a very dirty mill-stream. They were very ready to talk to us, but a
little shy of the microphone at first...
'Now what about you two...what's your name?'
'Cynthia Green.'
'And you're...?'
'Francis Ravenscroft.'
'And you were both evacuated on...?'
'September the first.'
'You know about all that! How are you liking it? What do you think
of it all?'
'I think it's very nice, we've been taken into the homes of the
people and made very homely on the first night...'
'Everybody speaks to you.'
'Is it very different from town life do you think?'
'Oh yes, oh yes, it's a lot nicer than the town life...the country
air's a lot different than the town air and...a lot nicer in the
country than in town...especially Manchester!'
'You don't feel homesick or anything?'
'No! Not got a chance for that!'
'Hello Mum and Dad. Don't get worried about us...we're all very
happy here and I don't think anybody wants to go home yet. We go on
the moors nearly every night and watch all the cows...and
sheep...grazing...and the river flowing...we're quite near it now.
And we go playing football on the football pitch...and watch the
colliery. Last week the boys and girls had a match of netball...and
there was 14 girls and three boys...but the girls won us!'
Recent
Transcript (from The
Wakefield Express Friday December 21st
2007):
So grateful for her care
My name is Ken Griffiths and, during the
Second World War, I was evacuated to Wakefield, well to Outwood, to
be precise, where I first met the person who was to become my mum.
Her name is Lydia Whyke and in November she
had her 92nd birthday.
She and her husband Cliff looked after me in those dark days, and I
love them both for being so caring.
Although poor Cliff has been in heaven for
some years now, they are always in my thoughts, I've always kept in
touch with them through all these years.
I now live in Australia, but I still phone
mum every two weeks to see how she is keeping. She still has
her great Yorkshire sense of humour. She's the greatest.
I wonder if anyone else has kept in touch
with these wonderful people who, during the war years, did such a
wonderful job looking after us kids ?
One grateful evacuee,
Ken Griffiths,
Australia,
ken_gladys@westnet.com.au
WORLD WAR 2 1939-1945 Notes for
Doreen Wilkinson - November, 2007
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