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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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Happy go lucky Americans in Abergavenny

by helengena

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Archive List > Childhood and Evacuation

Contributed by听
helengena
People in story:听
Ian Clissold
Location of story:听
Abergavenny
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A4487808
Contributed on:听
19 July 2005

Ian Clissold in July 2005 at the Wales Remembers event in Cardiff.

This story was submitted by Helen Hughes of the People's War team in Wales on behalf of Ian Clissold and is added to the site with his permission.

The Americans came in 1942 to 43鈥 It was great. They had chewing gum and a different way of life. They were just nice people鈥e enjoyed their company. We had sweets off them and everything. Years later we found a tin of sweets we鈥檇 been given 鈥 it must have been ten years later 鈥 and those sweets were as good as ever when we opened the tin. I remember one American saying I鈥檒l give you so many dollars if you can spit that chewing gum at a target鈥.and there was a weed with a flower on it and he just spat his chewing gum straight into the middle of it. And that鈥檚 the way they were鈥ust happy-go-lucky boys. They knew where they were going鈥maha, Gold, and into France they knew what they were up to. I remember the day they were going. The camp cleared overnight鈥.they were there one day鈥nd gone the next. They loaded them up and took them down to Dover and over on the ferries on D-day. When they left they left a heap of contraceptives - there must have been thousands of them and they chucked them all out in a heap when they were going abroad 鈥s boys got hold of these and started blowing them up as balloons and were going up the street with them鈥.and our parents were coming out bursting them! They wouldn鈥檛 say what they were 鈥 and we pretended not to know.
A funny thing happened recently when we went to Tampa in Florida. There was a chap there sweeping, and he was crippled鈥 we went across to him and he said 鈥淲here are you from鈥 and we said 鈥淎bergavenny South Wales鈥 鈥淥h damn it all鈥 he said 鈥淚 was from Ross 鈥 stationed in Ross in the war鈥. You鈥檇 never credit that 鈥ou go all that way out there to Tampa and he remembered Abergavenny as if it were yesterday鈥he hospitality he had there.

I can remember prior to the war starting the Territorial Army had a barracks at the bottom of North Street鈥nd they were stationed there. First thing in the morning they鈥檇 have a full military band come out鈥laying all the way along the Brecon Road鈥p the Green Lane, prior to the Americans coming鈥nd they鈥檇 dig air raid shelters for us, and they鈥檇 play all day there. And we used to get bottles of pop 鈥 Tizer pop 鈥 at tuppence halfpenny a bottle and there鈥檇 be a halfpenny back on the bottle and we boys would have the halfpennies. Funny old days.

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