- Contributed by听
- A7431347
- People in story:听
- Peter, Peggy and Richard Hill
- Location of story:听
- Canterbury
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A6414996
- Contributed on:听
- 26 October 2005
It was 1st June 1941, I was seven years old, living in 15 Querns Road, St Martin鈥檚 Hill, Canterbury with my mother, my brother Richard and my Dad. Peggy, the eldest one, she was a trainee nurse at the Kent and Canterbury hospital.
We had spent the night squashed in the Anderson Shelter with many neighbours during a raid. A group of us went down into Canterbury to see the damage (school was closed). The whole of the top of Canterbury High Street was destroyed. (All that鈥檚 left of that today is St George鈥檚 Church Tower, the rest has been rebuilt.) The rest from Lower Bridge Street, down the High Street to St George鈥檚 Lane and rose鈥檚 lane was all destroyed. And going crossways from Burgate to Watling Street; all was destroyed; shops, houses, schools everything. (About seven or eight years ago, they found St George鈥檚 Church and St George鈥檚 School together with the tomb stones laid flat under concrete, it had been covered over in the fifties.
The church was still smouldering from the firebombs. The vicar of that church was Reverend Keybald. He was in the church saving all the artefacts; crosses and bits and pieces. I didn鈥檛 see him again until 1998 when they were rebuilding the place. We saw dead people that day, they were covered up.
But if you weren鈥檛 hurt it didn鈥檛 frighten you. It was a great adventure. I was only seven; I have no memories of being frightened.
This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War Site by Helena Noifeld of 大象传媒 Radio Kent and has been added to the website on behalf of Peter Hill with his permission and he fully understands the site鈥檚 terms and conditions.
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