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15 October 2014
WW2 - People's War

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age doesn't matter

by helen courtney lewis

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Archive List > British Army

Contributed by听
helen courtney lewis
People in story:听
helen courtney lewis
Location of story:听
guildford,Kingston, Chippenham
Background to story:听
Army
Article ID:听
A1072883
Contributed on:听
08 June 2003

I was just 17 and two months of age in 1942, too young for military service, but the idea of joining the forces seemed more exciting than another two years of boarding school, besides I wanted my revenge on those German bombers who kept me awake every night.
When I went to the recruitment office, I was not asked for my birth certificate, but was accepted into the A.T.S and told to present myself at Victoria station the next week, where I would then be loaded onto a train, shipped with hundreds of others to basic training camp in Guildford. Shivering with anticipation and fear I stood waiting for orders dressed in my best utility outfit. a red hat, dress, shoes and coat, very chic, I felt
Our barrack hut was huge and the beds were made up of three small mattresses called "biscuits". These ,wrapped in rough army sheets and grey blankets had to be piled up, one on top of the other at the foot of the bed ready for daily inspection . We were lucky, the boys didn't get sheets.
Here we were assessed, inoculated and de loused. Yes, most of us did have lice or at least nits. The worst cases had their heads wrapped in white cloths over some sort of de lousing chemical. I escaped with a comb through that discoverd two nits. I had never felt so humiliated in my life. All this for a pay of eleven bob a week
After two weeks of basic "square bashing" we were chosen for the units we would join.
I found myself as a Signals Corps trainee and sent to ex King Farouk's luxury villa in Kingston where we were taught how to manage an old fashioned telephone switch board, march in step and digest Army food. As way of comp猫nsation, our pay was raised to 16 shillings.
With my signals corps badge proudly pinned onto the left side of my uniform, I found myself posted to RAF group headquarters at Rudloe Manor in Chippenham near Bath Here thank goodness, I was never called upon to use a switch board, but acted as a gunnery liason officer seated above the enormous plotting table manned by members of the W.A.A.F who followed the movements of enemy planes, moving plaques that indicated their height, numbers, speed and direction across the map of the southwest of England. My job was to warn anti aircraft guns when the enemy was approaching their area and give the order to "fire"
Not infrequently the Air Commodore would open the glass panel that divided me from his vantage point and scream. 路"Helen, you're firing at our planes again:"
Great excitement and speculation on June 6th 1943, when we saw hundreds of plaques indicating that they were our own planes headed for France. Little did we realise at the time, we were watching the making of history, the D Day landings had started.

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