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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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Dodging Bullets

by U1650494

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Archive List > Childhood and Evacuation

Contributed by听
U1650494
People in story:听
Jean Bradley
Location of story:听
Lee on Solent
Background to story:听
Civilian
Article ID:听
A4240469
Contributed on:听
22 June 2005

This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War site by Rebecca Hood of the People's War Team in Wales on behalf of Jean Bradley and has been added to the site with her permission. The author fully understands the site's terms and conditions. The story was gathered at an event to mark the 60th anniversary of VE day, held in Abergavenny.

I remember the first bombs - we were living in a shelter my father built. It was an Anderson shelter but he put an extension on to make it more comfortable for us. there were two double bunks and two single bunks and I always used to insist on sleeping on the top bunk because I would get a bit claustrophobic and the first air raid that I remember was ten bombs in a row鈥nd I remember the first one whizzing down and I kept saying 鈥渢hat one didn鈥檛 get us鈥.that one didn鈥檛 get us鈥.鈥 my mother was getting frightened and said for goodness sake come down, get on the bottom bunk 鈥ou know. I had terrific confidence in the shelter. I felt perfectly safe down there because it was so well built I felt as safe as anything鈥hat didn鈥檛 worry me at all. But we had a few scary ones when we were outside鈥 remember one particular occasion鈥y father happened to be home that weekend鈥t happened to be on a Sunday and it was a bit rainy so it wasn鈥檛 such a nice day and because you were only allowed to have five inches of bath water you know鈥o save water and to save fuel鈥.my sister and I reckoned that if we got in the bath together we could have ten..ten inches you see鈥o we were busy having a bath. Because we weren鈥檛 allowed to use a lot of electricity鈥verything was rationed 鈥 my mother would get a towel and put it by the fire and get it when we were ready to get out of the bath. Well this particular morning there was an Air Raid Warden at the door delivering ear plugs or something like that, something or other, and he was talking to my father at the door and then suddenly there was a German plane had got through 鈥 there was no air raid warning siren and he came machine gunning the road鈥ame all the way down the street and my sister and I looked at one another, we knew there was something wrong because we could hear the noise you know鈥o we just, without a word we both got out of the bath, we didn鈥檛 have a towel we were completely naked and covered in soap and the Air Raid Warden at the front door he was lying flat on his face in the doorway my father was pushing my mother out of the way to try and get us鈥 I was the biggest one and my mother grabbed me and I was about as tall as her because she was only about four foot eight and my father grabbed the smallest one and we rushed to the back door to run out to the shelter鈥nd dad got out first and then鈥um slipped with me and fell on a grating and I grazed all my spine and she grazed all her elbow so we were tearing into the shelter.

Anyway we were OK but a friend of ours who lived up the road 鈥 she was in the garden with her father and he got seven bullets in his leg and I think a girl of 20 she was out with brother and she was killed鈥he got a bullet in her stomach and I think there was a football match going on and I think they had a go at the children. But they didn鈥檛 tell us that, naturally鈥e didn鈥檛 hear all the detail. But that was quite scary - and another thing that was a bit upsetting was the V2 bombers and things, because you never got any warning really with those . You were OK if you could hear it 鈥 if you could hear the rumbling of it鈥e saw one coming up the street one day and I thought it was going to hit a tree because it wasn鈥檛 that high鈥.but as soon as the engine stopped it either glided or it went straight down鈥nd this particular day it glided and went a few streets away鈥ou know. But then another day we were going to school, a girlfriend and I鈥e had come home for lunch鈥.and again there was no warning 鈥 sometimes they got through without any warning like, you know. We heard one of these V2 things with this drumming of this engine and I was really quite frightened that day, and a woman saw us and hammered on her window for us to come in, and just as we got to her door so the bomb went off like, you know 鈥 that fell a few streets away 鈥 but during part of the war we went down to the south coast where my father was stationed 鈥e got fed up not being with him so we joined him down at Lee on Solent where he worked at the airport and there again there were only a handful of kids downs there because most of them had been evacuated and the local school had been taken over as a hospital and we used the library for lessons. So there were literally only a handful of us down there, but we used to come up home from school, get a couple of sandwiches to go on the beach in the summer but all the top of the cliffs were covered with barbed wire so we used to crawl under the barbed wire, which we shouldn鈥檛 have done鈥. to get onto the beach. But if there was a red flag flying it meant there was practice going on with live ammunition so if the flag was flying we had to be very careful.鈥.and we were there one day when they were expecting an invasion and they blew a hole in the pier 鈥.because it used to go way out. So we thought that was exciting we saw that blown up one day! And another thing鈥here were trenches on the cliff face and what surprised us was that every other gun was a dummy one鈥.just to look good from the air I suppose and so we would play on there but if a siren sounded we would get into one of the trenches. The siren went one day and we were in one of the trenches and we saw a German aircraft 鈥 I think its terrible now when I think about it 鈥 but it was shot down in flames and we all cheered you know as kids not thinking about the poor devil that was inside like you know they were just the enemy and you didn鈥檛 think of them in that way like.

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