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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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A Wartime Childhood in Ashtead

by Wymondham Learning Centre

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Archive List > Childhood and Evacuation

Contributed by听
Wymondham Learning Centre
People in story:听
Rosemary Ann Morgan (n茅e Vallins)
Location of story:听
Ashtead, Surrey
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A4370960
Contributed on:听
06 July 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, Rosemary Morgan, who fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions.

My mother and father moved from the East End of London to Ashtead in Surrey in 1935, when I was two years old. Later, when they looked around for a school for me, they were told the one they had chosen, about five minutes walk from the house, was zoned, and I would have to go to one a mile and a half away, crossing main roads to get there. Mother complained to her MP, who brought it up in parliament. Meanwhile mother taught me at home. One day I was playing in the garden, dressed in an old coat, when several black limos drew up outside the house. It was the press. They wanted some pictures. My mother said she鈥檇 change me into more suitable clothes but they said they wanted me just as I was. I was taken in one of the cars with my grandmother, who lived with us, and at various points along the route to the school I鈥檇 been told to attend the car was stopped and we were photographed trudging along the road. A final picture was taken outside the school with the two of us looking over the fence. A sob story appeared in the paper with the headline 鈥淩osemary Plays Alone鈥. Then in September 1939 the war began and the nearer school was de-zoned, so at the age of six I did go there. The school had a lot of evacuees and for a while some of them were actually taught in our living room, for some reason. I remember a Crocodile of them trooping in. They were children of about nine or ten, who seemed very big to me.

My father had been very ill and died in April 1939, so mother had to go out to work. At the beginning of the war we were sent a couple of evacuees. I remember them as 鈥渂ig girls鈥. They were probably teenagers. They stayed for a short while during the 鈥減honey war鈥 and then went back to London, where I believe at least one of them was killed.

Then there came a visitation from five of my grandmother鈥檚 friends from the East End, who arrived unannounced, looking pathetic and wanting to be taken in. They were an elderly couple, their grandson Derek, who was about fourteen, and their son and daughter-in-law, Derek鈥檚 father and mother. Later another adult turned up, bringing the total number in our household to nine. Two of Derek鈥檚 older siblings, a sister in the ATS and a brother in the RAF, turned up on leave from time to time. The new arrivals stayed for what seemed a long time. I never had a bedroom, and slept with my mother. We took over the downstairs rooms for sleeping. The rest of the place was taken over by the interlopers.

I was never evacuated myself. I was an only child and so was my mother, which perhaps made her more reluctant to be separated from me. We had sirens and air raids, though few, and harmless, bombs. I don鈥檛 think I was ever scared. During air raids we used to stand under the stairs, joined by our next-door neighbour, whose husband was an air-raid warden. She used to hang a blanket up at the door, rather than closing it, in case of any blast.

When the flying bombs, the V-1s and V-2s, arrived, we used to take our bedding down to some brick kilns about a mile away at night and sleep on two-tier bunks set up there. When I went to bed at home I used to hold the top sheet in one fist and suck my thumb with the corner of the sheet tickling my nose. But at the brick kiln we had only blankets, which were too hairy. I believe I鈥檇 be sucking my thumb to this day if it weren鈥檛 for the air raids!

Eventually we bought an indoor Morrison shelter (by this time the older couple had left and bought a house nearby) in which I used to sleep, taking my little Scottie dog in with me. The Morrison was the size of a good double bed with a top at about table height. Of course the top came to be used for dumping our possessions on and when the war ended we had a job finding places to store them.

Eventually the Americans arrived and started taking the local girls out. I used to go walking in the woods with only my dog (something it would be unthinkable to allow a small child to do these days) and occasionally glimpsed a canoodling couple in the bushes, and used condoms lying about. We children used to call these 鈥渟punk bladders鈥 though we had no idea what the term meant or what the couples in the bushes were actually up to.

I didn鈥檛 feel restricted by rationing because I didn鈥檛 know any better. I do know we weren鈥檛 short of sugar, as mother didn鈥檛 use it in tea. We saved all of our kitchen scraps, and it was my job to take them to feed a neighbour鈥檚 chickens once a week. I hated doing it, because I felt the neighbours didn鈥檛 really want them and I was old enough to sensitive about it, but in return we got a few eggs. We had school milk, and each child had an enamel mug that hung on the outside of the satchel. Most were flat-bottomed cylinders, but mine had a curved bottom and the other children called it 鈥 Rosemary鈥檚 Po鈥, which I hated.

At the end of the war the Americans gave all the children a party at the village hall, which had been built as a Peace Memorial after world war one.

I remember asking my mother once, 鈥淲hat do they put in the newspaper when there isn鈥檛 a war on?鈥 She laughed, and said she was sure they'd find something.

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