- Contributed by听
- CSV Media NI
- People in story:听
- Mae McAree
- Location of story:听
- Ballynahinch, NI
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A5211659
- Contributed on:听
- 19 August 2005
This story is taken from an interview with Mae McAree, and has been added to the site with her permission. The author fully understands the site's terms and conditions. The interviewer was David Reid, and the transcription was by Bruce Logan.
------
The Government had a scheme that all children would be evacuated. We went to Granny鈥檚 for about 3 years. Outside Ballynahinch. So we were really in the country. But they heard the bombs and saw Belfast burning. My brother and aunt went up into the mountains and saw Belfast burning, but to me it just sounded like doors rattling. That would be 18-20 miles away.
Before this even, before the blitz my brother and I and my other brother, the 3 of us were walking down the road and this airplane came along 鈥 it was a German plane. He was on a recce. It must have been before any of the blitzes. He was doing a wee recce, and he came in over Newcastle [from the South], and he waved. He had a leather hat and all on. I only saw the airplane. My 2 brothers saw this, because they鈥檇 be interested in airplanes. Plus my father was in the Air Force, so they were interested in planes. So my brother wrote an article for some wee paper, 鈥淚reland鈥檚 own鈥, I think it was. And he said he鈥檇 love to meet the pilot, because he waved and he waved back.
He did [realise it was German], but he didn鈥檛 realise the importance of it. I mean, we were only 9 and 10.
They told Granny about the airplanes and all. 鈥淗e鈥檒l do no harm where he is, up in the sky鈥. But I remember that blitz. The noise I heard, but they saw the sky burning. Red sky coming up. I didn鈥檛 know what it was, you see, cause there鈥檇 been no communication.
Well, we had a radio that went by dry battery. Ever heard of a dry battery? And that only went on to 6 o鈥檆lock news at night.
So it would have been the next night, you know, before we knew about bombs in Belfast. That鈥檚 what the papers said, bombs in Belfast.
[censorship]
I think they gave as much as they possibly could. I think they gave as much as they possibly could, of ... Well, I suppose that fellows who went to work on the bus would come home saying 鈥淏elfast鈥檚 flattened鈥. You鈥檇 get a bit of information that way.
We didn鈥檛 realise what that was. My mother would have come out all on weekends, and must have come out the following weekend, and said that she was all right. Because we hadn鈥檛 a phone, of course, there was no mobile phones.
And I think bakers that would have come out with bread would have being saying that such a street was flattened. But my mother did come out a couple of days later, and said she was all right. The house was all right, and nobody that we knew had been injured. Although there was people in the area at the top of the street had been killed. Manner street. It was a complete, it runs from Claytonville Road to Old Park Road. Manner street. And there was an army encampment there, Goodwood Barracks. Maybe they were after that. Because it was where the landmine landed. And a father and a mother and 2 daughters were killed by the landmine. It hit a house. It hit 4 houses actually.
They got poor ratio 鈥 they got the most attacks. There was the baths in the Falls Rd was used as a morgue, and it was packed with bodies. I don鈥檛 know 鈥 it was only weeks after that I learned much about what had really happened, you know? When you鈥檙e 9. although we did listen to the news, and made a lot because of my father being away in the Air Force.
Oh yes, I think they started building the air raid shelters and all, more air raid shelters, and there was a service called the National Fire Service, the NFS, and they would have been round nearly every day checking that all the wee street hydrants were working. And after the blitz, all the blitz squares were cleared and they put these big water tanks 鈥 they were actually built, I remember them being built. There was actually one down the road here. There was one 鈥 they always called the one in town the 鈥淏litz Square鈥. Where the electric board on Bridge Street, that was the 鈥淏litz Square鈥. Those are new buildings. That was all a big water tank, in case there was a blitz on the docks I suppose. Another one.
And then in different places. In Tiffin park Avenue where I lived, there was a First Aid post. And it was kitted out for men to spend the night, so if there was an alarm they鈥檇 be on duty. They were on duty all the time. And it was fire warden who were on roofs of buildings. They was to look out for fire-bombs, I suppose, or listen for the aircraft coming. Although I suppose you would have heard it long before that. But they had to be there. I think that you didn鈥檛 get the compensation if you weren鈥檛 protecting, if you weren鈥檛 doing something to protect yourself. I don鈥檛 know, I just have that feeling. Maybe so.
Anything that came, we would have been ready for it. After the blitz, I think so.
漏 Copyright of content contributed to this Archive rests with the author. Find out how you can use this.