Sherry: Robin, when you look back, what do you
remember about being a child in London during World War II?
Robin, about 1940, with his father
and older brother
Robin: We kids ran free, even though it was wartime,
with army bases close by and planes flying overhead. But we knew no other life.
We climbed trees, waded streams and caught tadpoles and fish in there or in
ponds. We pretended we were soldiers just like our dads or uncles but with
sticks for guns.
Sherry: Were there signs of war that you took for
granted as part of daily life?
Robin: We had to carry gas masks to school
until it was considered safe. When the air raid siren went off a teacher led us
to an air raid shelter across a school field. Most side streets had a communal
air raid shelter built on the road itself, allowing one vehicle to pass.
As there was strict petrol rationing, that was fine,
as there was so little traffic. If your parents had a car, which mine didn’t,
it was put in storage. Petrol rationing was severe, and available mainly for
commercial use only.
We had no air raid shelter at home. During air raids
we slept downstairs, under the dining room table or under the stairs. Luckily for
us there were no bombs dropped close to our house. Living a few miles from an
army base, the streets were filled with army vehicles, gun carriers and tanks.
An air raid shelter
Sherry: It is very meaningful to get this real-life
glimpse of children's lives during wartime, my friend. Sadly, too many children are
still experiencing its horrors.
I would like to include one of your poems here, if I
may:
It did no good of course
Drawing the black curtain
To exclude the night
Was some comfort in war
As under the table
We crept all wrapped up tight
For kids it was fun
Parents were anxious, scared
So the bombs they still fell
But drawing the curtain
Flashes were not seen
We heard not Mum's scared keen
The planes rumbled above
As wrapped up in her love
We slept peacefully
Innocent, unaware
We woke up in our beds
T'was like every day
I went off to school
Through smoke, rubble and fire
A few missing from class
But lessons are the same
Gas mask by our sides
Was some comfort in war
Drawing the black curtain
To exclude the night
Was some comfort in war
As under the table
We crept all wrapped up tight
For kids it was fun
Parents were anxious, scared
So the bombs they still fell
But drawing the curtain
Flashes were not seen
We heard not Mum's scared keen
The planes rumbled above
As wrapped up in her love
We slept peacefully
Innocent, unaware
We woke up in our beds
T'was like every day
I went off to school
Through smoke, rubble and fire
A few missing from class
But lessons are the same
Gas mask by our sides
Was some comfort in war
Robin: We lived about 37 miles
from London, in between the major Army base at Aldershot and the town
of Farnham, Surrey. Luckily we were midway between the two, so only a
few bombs nearby by accident! Later on the Doodlebug rockets fell at random
when they ran out of fuel, but everyone soon leaned that if you heard the drone
of the rocket you were safe, for it was only when the engine stopped would the
rocket fall to Earth. Us kids were playing cricket in a field one light
evening; we heard one fly overhead but, hearing it, we knew we were safe!
St. Paul's Cathedral under heavy bombing
[forces-war-records.co.uk]
Britain was bombed through much of the war,
especially the industrial cities, docks and military establishments. Children,
however, adjusted easily in wartime, so our bargaining tools at school were
bomb fragments and shell casings, our toys were planes and tanks and cigarette
cards, which were no longer in cigarette packets, so some series were highly
valued. Worn or unpopular designs were used to play a card-flicking game trying
to get yours closest to a wall!
Years gone by
With grandparents two doors down
Two aunties there too
Two cousins tucked in
Fathers had been called to war
In Britain's dark hour
The war was raging
Housing appropriated
For the duration
One uncle at sea
The other stationed far away
Each child same story
My dad in London
Keeping things working at night
Dowsing the bombs fires
Same for all of them
All they had was constant hope
And fear for us kids
Nobody was spared
Others uncles at front too
All gone to war's call
North Africa, Burma
Fighting in desert, jungle
Patrolling the seas
War's an ugly thing
Making orphans and widows
and peace for us kids
You fought for our homes
You fought for us your children
Now we honor you
Sherry: Yes, we honor them indeed. They fought a
hard battle to preserve democracy from fascism. I know your father had a very
important job during the war. Would you tell us about it?
en.wikipedia.org
Robin: My father’s job was to help maintain the
electrical power system in London. He also he did compulsory fire watching,
as London was being bombed with incendiary bombs that set fire to buildings,
necessitating him staying at work all night as the power stations had to be
protected. So he and other workers sat on the roof all night with buckets of
water and sand to douse them. This meant our mother and us two boys had to cope
alone, hoping he would return home the next day.
For kids, though, war was exciting. My brother and I
would be so pleased when Dad came home from the midst of the bombing with
chunks of shrapnel from burst bomb fragments. All kids would collect what they
could to show off to other boys, and we were always pleased to have him as a
source of collectibles!
Families were often split up through the war or
shifted to safer housing with a relative further from the bombing zones. After the port of Southampton on
the south coast was bombed, my wife Maureen’s aunt and cousin came to came to
live with her family until war’s end.
Sherry: Such a time of turmoil. I am amazed by your
lack of fear. But then you were very young. Your parents must have done an
admirable job of making you feel safe, amidst such uncertainty.
Robin: It was only after the war that I fully
understood the gravity of war and the effect it had on everyone. In the main,
those uncles that came back from serving overseas were not keen to talk about
their experiences. My favorite uncle who had served in North
Africa, Italy and Austria couldn’t, as he had seen too much
and couldn’t share it.
Both Maureen, my wife, and I lost uncles in the war,
both in Europe and in the Far East, particularly in German and
Japanese prison camps. Meaning some of our young cousins grew up not knowing
their fathers who had died.
Sherry: My
favourite uncle served in the RAF in those years. He could never talk about
what he had seen either. He had such sadness in his eyes. Your uncles must have
suffered terribly in the prisoner of war camps.
I would like to include another of your poems here,
if I may:
Toddler in peacetime
Then schoolboy when the bombs fell
But we had free milk
Food was very scarce
Everything was rationed then
Except mothers love
Kids ran wild and free
Bus to school and Ma to work
Dad in London town
His job was great fun
Dowsing incendiary bombs
Dropped by enemy
Eyes on the skies
Looking for the hostile planes
No that's one of ours
Empty grocers shelves
Food was short and so was I
Cold damp bomb shelters
Wrapped up in blankets
Waiting for all clear signal
Let's get back to bed
Wrote childish scrawl note
To uncle in Italy
Cheered him up he said
Another aunt sad
This uncle's not coming home
So she cried a lot
All kids at school fence
Army trucks and tanks pass by
Heading for the coast
Us kids played in the fields
Doodlebug flew overhead
Good it has flown on
The tide was turning
We found out how bad it was
For millions more
We all cheered at last
For peace was finally here
Weird war for youngsters
Then schoolboy when the bombs fell
But we had free milk
Food was very scarce
Everything was rationed then
Except mothers love
Kids ran wild and free
Bus to school and Ma to work
Dad in London town
His job was great fun
Dowsing incendiary bombs
Dropped by enemy
Eyes on the skies
Looking for the hostile planes
No that's one of ours
Empty grocers shelves
Food was short and so was I
Cold damp bomb shelters
Wrapped up in blankets
Waiting for all clear signal
Let's get back to bed
Wrote childish scrawl note
To uncle in Italy
Cheered him up he said
Another aunt sad
This uncle's not coming home
So she cried a lot
All kids at school fence
Army trucks and tanks pass by
Heading for the coast
Us kids played in the fields
Doodlebug flew overhead
Good it has flown on
The tide was turning
We found out how bad it was
For millions more
We all cheered at last
For peace was finally here
Weird war for youngsters
Sherry: I am sure there was cheering, at war's end. Is there an especially vivid memory you have, of a defining
moment of the war?
en.wikipedia.org
Robin: Man had not been flying for 40 years, but the
skies were full of planes. We boys could identify them by wing shape and the
sound of their engines.
On one of the last days of summer 1940, our family
spent the afternoon on the Hampshire downs. In that glorious setting, we
watched a dogfight overhead – tiny planes droning and firing and circling and
falling on that dying day of summer. It was the culmination of the Battle of
Britain, a deciding point in the war. The action that day was proof to the
British that we could win despite the odds.
Sherry: My goodness, Robin, that sounds amazing. It
is like you lived in all the movies I ever saw about World War II. It must have been glorious when the war came to an end.
Robin: The war ended, but not the privation of those
dreadful years. There was not much of anything in the shops. Rationing
continued for a few years. With no television, our great pleasure was to visit
the cinema, to watch a grey film in that grey town in a grey country in those
grey times.
Sherry: What an amazing childhood you had, my
friend, and what heart-stirring memories. Thank you so much for sharing these
vivid recollections with us. It has been such a privilege to have this chat
with you. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts.
What a very special chat this has been with our beloved Old Egg. We are sure it has been meaningful for you. Do come back and see who we talk to next. Who knows? It might be you! [If you have an amazing story to tell, email me and we'll chat!]