
Lachlan MacKinnon
|
Lachlan MacKinnon
DOB 06/11/18
Sheila McLeod
DOB 24/02/1928
Lachlan: Well for a start let’s
talk about sweeties. That was the most memorable thing for me as there
weren’t many sweeties around at all. You got a ration but it
was very little.
Sheila: I remember everything about
rationing; sugar, butter, tea, it was even difficult to get potatoes
and eggs. We had powdered milk and dried eggs. You didn’t really
see eggs in the shops but we had a friend who had a few hens and we
used to get some eggs from her. As food was rationed our father grew
potatoes and vegetables in the garden so at least we weren’t
short for those things.
Sheila: I think people probably
had healthier diets during the war. The government seemed to think
so. You had to get used to eating things like spaghetti and macaroni;
things we weren’t really used to.
Lachlan: I remember the baffle
walls at the entrance of all the closes. The idea was that if a bomb
exploded in the middle of the street and you were inside the close,
you’d be protected. Many people who lived in tenements didn’t
have a shelter in the garden and sheltered at the bottom of their closes
instead. During the night if you happened to be out and it was dark
you could easily walk straight into one of those baffle walls. They
were brick and quite high, so it wasn’t very pleasant, was it?
Sheila: Well no, I tended not to
be out as much at night as you would be. It was quite scary. We had
our own shelter in the back garden. They were supplied, they gave you
the metal and you dug it into the ground and put a sand bag in top
of it. It felt quite small, particularly when you had a big family
like ours. It wasn’t very warm; in fact it was very damp and
stank.
Lachlan: No, it wasn’t very
pleasant but what could you do? It was either that or risk losing your
life.
Sheila: There were lots of difficult
times during the war. You couldn’t get clothes and didn’t
have central heating. It was a coal fire in the living room so you
would all be crowding around it trying to keep warm. Coal was difficult
to get too so we would gather up wood and anything else to try and
keep the fire going.
Shelia McLeod
|
Sheila: We went to the cinema quite
a lot during the war. We didn’t have a television but we were
lucky because we had a radio and got to listen to news programmes and
the children’s hour story at 5 0’clock.
Sheila: When we heard that Britain
had declared war it wasn’t really a surprise. I think we had
all been expecting it. Nothing much happened to begin with and it was
nearly a year before we started to feel the crunch.
Lachlan: Everybody knew a war was
coming. All those other countries had been taken over by Hitler and
then there was the civil war in Spain.
Sheila: We had lots of troops from
different countries based here during the war.
Lachlan: We used to see the Queen
Mary bringing in soldiers from America. They would get unloaded at
Gourock and put on a train from there. Some would go up north and others
down to London.
Sheila: And if there were children
about when they were going on the train, they would shout up to them
for sweets because the Americans always had some sweets to give to
them. Chewing gum, the Americans were always chewing gum.
Lachlan: They would throw them
out of the window as the passed along on the train.
Sheila: My sisters and myself were
evacuated after the blitz. The house was badly damaged; the windows
and doors were blown out. Not just the glass, the whole frames. We
had friends in Skye and it was decided that the younger members of
the family should go up there. We were up there for a couple of months
and had to go to school there as well. I didn’t really mind being
evacuated because it was during the summer, the end of May beginning
of June so it was quite nice up there, apart from the fact you were
in somebody else’s house.
Sheila: We were very, very happy
when we found out the war had ended. There were a lot of people singing
songs and cheering and dancing around, it was great. It took a while
for the goods to come back into the shops.
Lachlan: It just came back gradually
really, even bread was difficult to get, you had to queue up to get
loafs of bread and things like that.
|