- Contributed by听
- AgeConcernShropshire
- People in story:听
- Thomas SOLLY; Tom SOLLY (father); Nellie SOLLY (mother); Sheila SOLLY (sister)
- Location of story:听
- Ramsgate, Kent
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A6470291
- Contributed on:听
- 28 October 2005
Tom Solly 1939
I remember the war - the Second World War - My War.
With the fertile memory and imagination of a young boy, I adopted it as my very own property, with all the baises and colouring that childhood can give.
Just where to start is a puzzle because the ideas and images come tumbling out in confusion, some damping out the others and often obscuring those I know were of the greatest importance.
Perhaps being raised in the seaside town of Ramsgate, within sight of the French coast, and crammed with maritime tradition, affected me from my earliest days, and gave me at the outbreak of war, a feeling of transition, as if this were the most natural progression of life, instead of the shock felt by my elders able to assess the impact of the horrors to come.
Certainly one of my first memories was the visit of the destroyer, HMS SCOUT, to our harbour, and spending much of my free time gazing in awe at the ship and her smart crew, wondering how the guns worked, how her monster searchlight was manned, and thrilling to the sound of the bosun's call. The first love of my life was the F.T. Everard coaster ALACRITY unloading a cargo of coal for our local gasworks, how huge she seemed to young eyes, a real ship. All this sea romance bombarding me at the tender age of seven or eight!
I had been familiar, as a child, with stories of the Great War, listening to stories about my maternal grandfather who skippered a minesweeping trawler in Scottish waters, but these were so distant as to be unreal. Now the real thing was about to start, it was an exciting game.
War came as I was in church on the Sunday morning of September 3rd 1939; the vicar curtailed the service with the announcement broadcast over the wireless. Hymns and anthems came to a halt for us choirboys, and I raced home choking with the excitement at the first-sounding of the air-raid sirens bringing everyone to a state of Alert.
The people of Thanet had been preparing for war over a number of years with the construction of multiple deep tunnel shelters mined through the chalk rock underlying the towns. These shelters were to become home to the population over the next few years, some people living for months on end 60 feet below the surface without seeing daylight. Individual cubicles were constructed in the tunnels with boards and hessian, and the full processes of living were carried out in these close confines - cooking and eating the meals prepared over paraffin cookers, sleeping in bunks hung about with curtains to ensure some degree of privacy from the gaze of passers-by. I still recall the smells; mildewed scaking, disinfectant from the chemical toilets, acetylene lamos mingling with simmering stew and frying bacon.
To this day, a dark sky with clouds passing across the moon, flips my memory into pictures of hurrying along the blacked-out street to get to the tunnel entrance accompanied by the eerie wails of the sirens, sometimes punctuated by the local anti-aircraft batteries loosing-off shells at ramdom into the night. We boys used to keep our eyes alert next day on the way to school for souvenir fragmants of the rounds we had heard during the night.
In the early part of the war our shoreline was accessible, as it was in peacetime, to the civilian population. The conflict was brought to Thanet's doorstep because of our closeness to the Goodwin Sands where mined vessels were often cast ashore damaged beyond salvage; their cargoes washed ashore onto our beaches to become fair game for any beachcombers industrious enough to dodge the Customs and our town bobbies. The contraband was of a mixed nature, but sometimes the tide brought in some desirable merchandise.
When the liner DUNBAR CASTLE was mined and stranded on the Goodwin her freight, bound for South Africa, arrived soaked and mostly damaged on our sands. On attractive item that she was carrying was a consignment of school pencils embossed with the name of the SA State Education Department, these proved popular with the townsfolk once they had been dried out.
Our family sat for hours unpicking soggy cigarettes and drying out the teased-out tobacco spread on newspapers before the hearth in large quantities which kept my father and his friends in smokes for a year. One of Dad'd favourite yarns was about the boots: he had spotted, one early morning, a crate floating shorewards and waited for an hour or so before he was able to wade out and haul it to safety. The crate was sound and watertight, yet yielded to the crowbar carried in anticipation of such an occassion. The contents were a pleasant surprise - new army boots of various sizes, promising Dad possibilies of some extra pocket-money - until he examined them more closely; all left footed boots would hardly excite prospective bargain hunters!
Our beds at home were made of the finest luxury kapok which felt like floating on a cloud, courtesy of the shore which at one time was covered with fluff like cultivated fields. Heating had seldom been a problem as we always had a supplementary supply of driftwood flotsam to burn. We often used huge slabs of cork insulation washed ashore from wrecks of refrigerated vessels; it burned with a dense red glow and a pungent odour when the wind wafted draughts down the chimney.
I could not claim that we were a well-to-do family, but my parents worked hard to keep the family soundly clothed and fed. Dad worked shifts at the gasworks in the boiler house and engine room, and Mum 'let' a room or two during the summer months, for holidays in peacetime, in order to remain solvent and to provide some extras for our well-being.
I used to collect 'fag' cards, taking months of searching and dealing to assemble a full set of cards; my wild dream then was to obtain the album in which to mount my collection, but the cost was beyond my means. I needed to raise threepence (old money) to reach the purchase price and finally summed the courage, or audacity to ask Dad to subsidise my scheme; his voice peaked to a pitch of disbelief at my request and he exclaimed "What! do you think I am made of money?" The album appeared some time later.
Our food was wholesome, plain and sufficient. Dad was a skilful sea angler and was able to bolster our diet with first rate fish; he also had a sixth sense in locating superb crabs and lobsters in the rocks at low water - with his bare hands. Mum cooked the lobsters in a huge fish kettle and we sat at the table armed with hammer and pliers in addition to our knives and forks. It became a standing joke in the family when we became aware of the luxury value of the seafood by crying "Oh, no, not lobsters for tea again!"
Holidays for my parents were out of the question but they must have sacrificed some comforts of life to send me away for a week at Maidstone with some friends who had lodged with us, as a token of reverse hospitality, or, I suspect, they were glad to be free of me for a while, it was a memorable week for me.
One other red-letter day was that voyage across the Channel to Calais on the paddlesteamer day excursion. My parents had obviously saved hard in order to treat themselves to the day trip to France and had played their cards close-to-chest about it lest I should suspect the plot. I stumbled on the notion by overhearing a careless remark and, confronting my devious parents, wheedled my way into the scheme and probably using some form of juvenile blackmail to secure a ticket for the great adventure. Even the bribe of "a whole sixpence to spend on anything you like" and the agonising decision to deprive myself of a long-coveted pack of coloured pencils at Woolworths failed to buy me off. The sea outing set my destiny to go to sea when I grew up.
Dad made me a wonderful barrow, stout and sturdy to do "errands", honour demanded that I should earn an occassional coin on Saturday mornings by delivering quarter-hundredweights of coke for orders obtained from neighbours. The only alternative form of income was the hopeful collection of empty jam-jars to sell to the rag and bone merchants.
The war continued without excess excitement for us and, discounting the omens like the introduction of rationing and the call-up of the neighbourhood men, it seemed that the current description of "Phoney War" was about correct and many folks believed that it would soon be over. How wrong they were. The German armies swept our BEF back to the coast and the time of Dunkirk was upon us.
Ramsgate's citizens were not prepared to see the spectacle of the procession of craft entering our harbour laden with shattered troops, we were aghast at the sight of the partly-clothed men, many of them wounded, trudging along the quayside en route to the railway station. British and French came ashore together, hungry and exhausted, some putting on a brave face with a wave to the cheering people. We kids had our important part to play in this military drama; we went collecting food and clothes from neighbours, and rushed them to the port where we personally handed them to the grateful troops. At the shop next-door but one, Mrs Finn gave me a bag of biscuits and packets of cigarettes which I dutifully delivered to the soldiers who acknowledged the gifts with a pat on my head -I felt ten feet tall.
From this stage Ramsgate's war history accelerated and the place assumed the appearance of a garrison town with the army erecting barricade, barb-wiring the beaches, installing the gun emplacements and setting up store dumps.
The invasion was imminent. Everyone expected German uniforms to appear at any moment, and the time had come when the chidren had to be moved out in a hurry.
"TOM'S WAR" (Part 2 - Evacuation) can be found at A6589885.
"TOM'S WAR" (Part 3 - After Evacuation) can be found at A6470291).
Story: This story has been submitted to the People'e War site by Muriel Palmer (volunteer) on behalf of Thomas SOLLY (author) and has been added to the site with his permission. The author fully understands the site's terms and conditions.
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