Online Library TheLib.net » Evacuees: children's lives on the WW2 home front
On the outbreak of the Second World War, during the first week of September 1939 over three million people were evacuated. Operation Pied Piper was the largest ever transportation of people across Britain, and most of those moved to safety in the countryside were schoolchildren. Social historian Gillian Mawson has spent years collecting the stories of former evacuees and this book includes the personal memories of over 100, in their own words. Their accounts reveal what it was like to settle into a new home with strangers, often staying for years. While many enjoyed life in the countryside, some escaping inner-city poverty, others endured ill-treatment and homesickness.A fascinating insight into the realities of wartime life, and a valuable oral history of a unique moment in British history.;Cover; Dedication Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Introduction; Chapter 1: Arrivals and Departures: Embarking on Evacuation; Chapter 2: A Different World: Adjusting to Life Away from Home; Chapter 3: The Kindness of Strangers: Wartime Foster Parents and Carers; Chapter 4: Suffer the Little Children: Homesickness and Heartbreak -- the Darker Side of Evacuation; Chapter 5: 'We Were With the Children': Organising Evacuation; Acknowledgements; Bibliography; Websites on Evacuation; The Evacuees Reunion Association; Index.
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