- Contributed by听
- Wymondham Learning Centre
- People in story:听
- R J Aubrey Cound
- Location of story:听
- King鈥檚 College, Taunton
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A4281202
- Contributed on:听
- 27 June 2005
This story was submitted to the 大象传媒 People鈥檚 War site by Wymondham Learning Centre on behalf of the author who fully understand the site's terms and conditions.
I went to King鈥檚 College, Taunton in 1939 when I was ten years old. Senior pupils were being awarded the victor ludorum, which made a great impression on me.
Throughout the war on the last night of term, the headmaster announced the names of those who had made the final sacrifice. At the end of the war, I was one of the few boys who remembered the senior boys who had gone to fight in the war.
I remember a family who went to Singapore in 1940 and people thought that they were lucky. Of course in the end Taunton proved safer.
My mother was a member of the Worcestershire Land Army committee. My father, a clergyman, kept a series of pigs in the grounds of the rectory, which helped the government鈥檚 food programme. Food was plentiful in Worcestershire, in the countryside, but school food was not so appealing.
I鈥檒l always remember a song we sang at school:
Underneath the spreading chestnut tree,
Mr Chamberlain said to me,
鈥淚f you want to get your gas mask free,
Join the blooming A.R.P.鈥
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