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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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Anudder View of the War

by nursethreecounties

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Archive List > Childhood and Evacuation

Contributed by听
nursethreecounties
People in story:听
Mrs. Vera Jones
Location of story:听
Ipswich, Suffolk.
Background to story:听
Civilian Force
Article ID:听
A7420033
Contributed on:听
30 November 2005

Cows! Thirty of them, to be precise, were my life for four years of my war. I worked for them, with them and even fought back at them when they knocked me off my stool.

I was nearly seventeen and working in a factory, in Hackney, London, but the time soon came when I would be called up. I didn't want to go into the forces and opted for the Land Army. When I became eighteen I was posted to somewhere in Norfolk, where there were a lot of land girls. We were each asked if we would like to go into a large unit and live in huts, or go to a small farm and be with a family. I chose the latter and was sent to a farm near Ipswich.

At first were given only dungarees and a jacket. When the uniforms were issued I didn't wear mine much as I didn't socialise, (I was much too tired and spent my free time relaxing), and didn't go home much; my Nan (who I'd lived with) had been bombed, although was safe, and my mother was evacuated with my brothers.

The Land Army, I think, was never given the recognition it deserved, and somewhow felt that as we were packed off on the land we were forgotten. We didn't have the privileges the forces had. For instance, we weren't allowed to use the NAAFI canteens, and it was the Salvation Army who fed and looked after us off duty. No other official bodies came to see us to see if we needed more clothing or to enquire as to our welfare.

The cows needed milking, cleaning, feeding and mucking out. I worked alongside the farmer, his wife and children, and it ws very hard going. We were out working at six every morning and I did so for nearly four years.

There were no machines to do the milking then; all done by hand. Many a kick I received from the cows and was sent flying, covered in milk showered over me from the bucket. It was a painful and mucky process at times, and when the calves were born it was an even more painful and mucky process.

I loved the life and didn't want to go home. Nan had died and my mother was still away. The boys had gone into the forces; one went into the army and was killed in Singapore, one died in a minesweeper, which was sunk, the third was a pilot who crashed in Scotland and had his legs severed, although he survived. My fourteen-year-old brother left home one day and didn't come back. It was assumed that he'd been killed in an air raid - he was never traced.

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