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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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A Childs memories

by derbycsv

Contributed by听
derbycsv
People in story:听
Margaret Badel
Location of story:听
Derby
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A4080142
Contributed on:听
17 May 2005

鈥淭his story was submitted to the site by the 大象传媒 Radio Derby鈥檚 CSV Action Desk with Margaret Badel鈥檚 permission. The author fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions鈥

As a child growing up during the war, there are many things I remember happening.

We had an Anderson Shelter in the garden erected by my father and a neighbour, which we used until it was filled with water. My grandparents lived in Scott Street, off Upperdale Road. A brick built public shelter was built outside their house 鈥 very dark and 鈥渟pooky鈥. My grandmother refused to use it; she preferred to sit under the stairs!

On V.E. Day and V.J. Day, we had street parties for the children, mums made jellies, blancmanges, sandwiches and cakes. Later we had a bonfire with an effigy of Hitler.

Taking the ration books to the Co-op, points for extras e.g. currants, tinned fruit, tinned salmon, jam or syrup.

Dockets were allocated to purchase furniture, for newly weds and bombed out victims, who needed basic replacements, families with growing children who needed extra beds.

There was an allocation (ration) of cool, the only means of heating the house and obtaining hot water.

We were issued with clothing coupons, never enough to clothe growing children 鈥 families had to 鈥渕ake do and mend鈥, making things last longer by darning, patching, letting down dress hems, repairing shoes 鈥 sometimes with a cardboard insole.

For one Christmas lunch we had roast rabbit (not rationed), no turkey or chicken. Homemade mincemeat and Christmas pudding 鈥 ingredients for which we had saved up all year 鈥 some very unusual!

There was advertising inside buses. Posters, which said:

鈥淒ig for victory鈥
鈥淐areless Talk costs lives鈥
鈥淜eep 鈥楳um鈥欌

Identity cards 鈥 I can still remember my number. Seeing the houses on Derby Lane which were bombed, and the smoke screens lining the pavements.

Things we used on washdays:
Soap powders:
Alono
Paddy 鈥 Co-op own brand
Wiclo bleaching tablet
Dolly blue 鈥 for whitening cottons
Dolly cream 鈥 for net curtains
Starch

Soap
Carbolic
Lifebuoy
Sunlight
Co-op newsheaf green block washing soap
All washed by hand or in a dolly tub with a set of dolly pegs 鈥 very hard work!

A few things I remember are:
Sylvan soap flakes
Swan floating toilet soap
Zebo
Zebra 鈥 black lead polish

Mansion
Minicream 鈥 polish
Cardinal red floor polish
Brown paper carrier bags with string handles

The Co-op hand many shops in Derby in almost every area, we used the one on Browning Circle, which consisted of:
Grocery 鈥 where bacon was sliced on a machine then weighed and wrapped
Butter, lard and cheese cut off large slabs at the back of the counter, wrapped in greaseproof paper and weighed at the point of purchase.
Sugar in blue bags, dried fruit in yellow bags. No polythene and few pre-packed goods.

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This story has been placed in the following categories.

Family Life Category
End of War 1945 Category
Derbyshire Category
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