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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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A Firewoman in Wartime - Part 11

by WMCSVActionDesk

Contributed by听
WMCSVActionDesk
People in story:听
Jacqueline Wilde
Location of story:听
Birmingham, Wales, Fleet in Hampshire
Background to story:听
Civilian Force
Article ID:听
A5560571
Contributed on:听
07 September 2005

This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War site by Maggie Smith from WM CSV Action Desk on behalf of Jacqueline Wilde and has been added to the site with her permission. Jacqueline Wilde fully understands the sites terms and conditions.

Part 11

When I got married we were only allowed twenty five people at the reception, because food was on ration and in any case you had to give up your ration books, you were only allowed twenty five because of the food rationing, so therefore the majority of my friends were unable to come, most of them were in the forces either the air force or the army and they were all posted, so it was a matter of asking a few relations that lived near, because there was the transport problem, petrol was rationed and on coupons unless you had a very important job, you didn鈥檛 get the petrol coupons so really twenty five people could sit down and have a meal, the rest had to just come and have a look and then they used to have to get time off or get leave from whatever service they were in, or factories they were going night and day so you couldn鈥檛 get time off from that so we always said that later on in life we would have a really good big marriage, but I鈥檓 afraid we never got round to it. We never had half the presents that were promised because relatives died off before they could get them, we only had white china there was no colour china services, everything was really basic, basic furniture, utility furniture nothing fancy at all. You had to have dockets if you wanted blankets or sheets and you also had it for materials, so that a bridesmaid dress, you had to have something that you could use afterwards so really a wartime wedding (you鈥檝e probably seen the pictures of it) is very basic and nothing lavish at all like you get today.

Everything was in short supply if you heard there were new shoes coming in you would queue up at shop and wait until they were delivered. In the windows they would put little high heel shoes but if you went in to ask for them they would say I鈥檓 sorry they are only two and half or they are a size three, my mother had very small feet and she wore a lot of high heels so she was able to go in. They didn鈥檛 like to get them out of the window you see they liked to get people to come in thinking that they鈥檇 got those shoes but they hadn鈥檛 really. So she would go in and say yes I take a size two and a half so they were compelled by law to take them out of the window but this didn鈥檛 happen very often because people didn鈥檛 have such small feet as a rule. They liked to keep these little model shoes in the window, the same with rugs if you knew a furniture shop would have some rugs in you鈥檇 have to queue up beforehand until the supply came in and then hoped by the time you got into the shop that there were still some rugs left.

All films for cameras were used by the RAF and for the planes, so if you heard of camera shop that was going to sell films you queued up again and for my wedding I managed to get two films so I haven鈥檛 got many pictures of the wedding at all and very few pictures were taken because for one thing it wasn鈥檛 allowed because of the defence regulations and also the majority of people didn鈥檛 really take holidays because they were too busy working for the war effort.

You also had coupons for sweets and cigarettes and the people who didn鈥檛 smoke used to swap with the people who didn鈥檛 eat sweets. I didn鈥檛 smoke and my husband didn鈥檛 smoke so we used to swap our cigarette coupons for sweet coupons. And if you went round to peoples houses for cups of tea you鈥檇 take a packet of tea with you. If you had got it to spare and they鈥檇 think that was something marvellous.

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