- Contributed by听
- threecountiesaction
- People in story:听
- Shirley Hobbs, Thompson Family, Mum, Dad, Keith, Bruce
- Location of story:听
- Luton
- Article ID:听
- A7446080
- Contributed on:听
- 01 December 2005
This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War Site by Three Counties Action, on behalf of Shirley Hobbs, and has been added to the site with her permission. The author fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions.
The House with the Cross
At the beginning of World War II I lived in a terraced house in central Luton, near to the Vauxhall Motor Factory and the small River Lea. After bombing raids aimed at Vauxhall, our little house was deemed to be 鈥榗ondemned鈥 by the local authority. Mum explained to me (aged four) that we should not be living there as it was unsafe, the foundations were not secure! There was no other accommodation available so we had to stay. The walls were in danger of falling outwards, so it was decided to put a steel girder through the house from front to back, to keep them upright. I can remember the diagonal steel cross on the front wall facing the street. The centre of the cross was level with the bedroom floor. I cannot remember the bar (鈥榬od鈥) going up through the rooms, so I presume it was behind furniture. I was only five years old when we moved to another house, but, would you believe it, more tenants were placed there when we moved out! After the war the area was demolished and is now occupied by Luton University Campus. Even the street no longer exists, but I know exactly the site of my 鈥楬ouse with the Cross鈥. (Coincidentally, it is where the University Chaplaincy now stands).
鈥淯nder the Table You Must Go鈥
We moved across town to a semi-detached house in 1943, a few days after my fifth birthday. At our previous home we had an Anderson air-raid shelter in the garden, but now we had become 鈥榩osh鈥 and had a Morrison shelter in the front room. This was a large table-shaped structure with a heavy steel top, four legs and mesh sides. It filled the room, and my Mother placed a large heavy table cloth over it during the day. In my innocence, I believed that shelter to be completely safe during air raids. My older brother and I used to sleep under there each night, and Mum used to bring my baby brother from his cot upstairs when the warning siren sounded. My Dad was either on night duty with the Home Guard or working at Vauxhall, which was just as well, as there was not room for five people in the shelter together. During daylight, where ever I was when the warning sounded, I always ran home to our front room, where I believed I would be safe forever. I recall the space in the room after the war when our trusted friend, the Morrison shelter, was taken away. Mum and Dad had to acquire some new furniture!
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