| DOB: 25/12/34
During the blackout you were allowed to carry
a torch but couldn’t use it very much other than when you were
in the close. We had baffle walls at the entrance to the close to prevent
back blasts going up into the building. People often walked into them
in the dark – lots of banged heads!
I heard a lot about Hitler from the Pathe news as we went to the
cinema a lot. That was a favourite type of entertainment and you’d
always have a news item at the end of the feature. I was at the cinema
when the war ended and saw the pictures of the concentration camps
and all those prisoners of war.
My father loved butter but this was rationed during the war. I had
five brothers and sisters so my father would laboriously divide our
family butter ration into seven equal parts. We all had our own little
bit on a saucer and depending on how greedy you were you would eat
it all in the one go or make it last all week. Sometimes we’d
get food parcels sent from relatives living in America. I had an uncle
who was on one of the convoys from Scotland to America and when he
came back he’d bring us big boxes of chocolates and other delicious
things you couldn’t get here. |