The Home Front in World War Two Read online




  The Home Front in World War Two

  Keep Calm and Carry On

  Susie Hodge

  First published in Great Britain in 2012 by

  REMEMBER WHEN

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  Pen and Sword Books Ltd

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  Barnsley

  South Yorkshire S70 2AS

  Copyright © Susie Hodge, 2012

  9781783469796

  The right of Susie Hodge to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

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  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  INTRODUCTION

  1 - THE HOME FRONT

  2 - WOMEN AT WAR

  3 - NO BANANAS

  4 - DIGGING FOR VICTORY

  5 - YOUR BATTLE ORDERS

  6 - THE CLOTHES DOCTOR

  7 - DOING THEIR BIT

  8 - HOME LIFE

  9 - OUTSIDE THE HOME

  10 - AFTERMATH

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  INDEX

  INTRODUCTION

  “Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” Winston Churchill, 18th June 1940

  On the day that World War Two was declared, 3rd September 1939, the Evening Chronicle ran the headline: “Play your part with calmness and courage.” Ten months later, and one month after Winston Churchill had become Prime Minister, he continued to urge the British public to remain resolute and positive.

  World War Two had a far greater effect on ordinary lives than World War One had ever had and the spirit of those who experienced it resulted in some remarkable achievements in the attempt to not only survive, but to sustain the morale of everyone else fighting for the same cause. This book investigates how the lives changed of some of the 90 per cent of the British population who remained civilians throughout World War Two; how they dealt with the difficulties and how, through a sense of solidarity, a spirit of defiance and innovative approaches to a wide variety of problems, they helped Britain to emerge victorious after almost six gruelling years.

  Many of these unsung heroes have been interviewed or remembered in this book and many other primary and secondary sources have been investigated to compile an image of how a nation faced adversity together. From these personal perspectives, the book paints a picture of how, through enterprise and endeavour, many managed to improve exceptionally difficult lives by “making do and mending”; not just with fabrics and thread, but in almost every aspect of their existence; from growing food, to cooking with new ingredients, to salvaging, learning new skills, joining voluntary services or helping others directly, all of which had an impact on so many facets of life during the war.

  Although being stalwart and brave at home while others fought abroad has been an aspect of conflicts for centuries, from the beginning World War Two brought unprecedented hardship to the British public. Evacuation, air raids and aerial bombardment, gas masks, ID cards, conscription, widespread shortages and rationing, blackouts, the Blitz, barrage balloons and anti-aircraft guns were just a few of the privations, horrors and worries that pervaded life in Britain that the public learned to live with. When mainland Europe fell to the Nazis in 1939, Britain was suddenly completely isolated. It had the effect of drawing the British people closer together, forging greater bonds, a firmer sense of involvement, refusal to yield and a more determined effort to defeat the enemy. Of course, there were exceptions. Some coped with the hardships in less than honest ways and long separations between couples prompted promiscuity in various quarters. There was a rise in crime and prostitution, while many suffered with psychological problems resulting from the stress. But on the whole, the entire population bolstered each other with incredible cheerfulness, courage and stamina.

  Strange new world

  From the moment war was declared, everyone dutifully carried their gas masks and identity cards. Streets were transformed by Air Raid Precautions (ARP) measures, including the sandbagging of buildings. In preparation for Nazi attacks, barrage balloons floated over towns, cities, industrial areas, ports and harbours while on the ground, anti-aircraft guns (known by most as “ack-ack” guns) could be heard practising regularly. Searchlight beams seeking out enemy aircraft in the sky were highly visible at night. Food was not immediately rationed, but from early on, there were shortages of butter and sugar. Petrol was rationed and some other consumer goods were also in short supply. In the war’s first days, all places of entertainment were closed for fear of bombing, while embryonic television transmissions ceased and beaches were all sealed off with barbed wire in case of invasion by the enemy, for the extent of the war.

  Being the home-makers and often bringing up children, women were the instigators and architects of most of the creativity and enterprise in and around the home. With huge resolve, while retaining the “homemaking” ideal that they had held before the war, housewives took up the enormous challenges that this particular war threw at them. Many also did war work, whether paid or voluntary and their resolve and refusal to let the situation overwhelm them played a large part in helping Britain win the war. At the start of the war the majority of women did not work outside the home but by 1942 400,000 British women were serving in the army, navy and air force. Women pilots flew planes from factories to RAF bases and when young men were called into the armed forces, millions of women worked in roles that had been traditionally the realms of men; in industry, building ships, aircraft, vehicles and arms, on buses and trains, in factories, hospitals and schools. Around 80,000 women joined the Women’s Land Army and worked in the fields. Others remained in their homes, caring for children, looking after elderly relatives, taking part in voluntary organisations and generally helping in the war effort and bolstering morale. Most suddenly found themselves on their own in sole charge of their households, which could include as well as their own children, evacuees, billeted workers or relatives who had been bombed out of their homes. They quickly learned how to deal with the changes and to protect those in their care. As the war continued, they learned how to make nourishing meals from fewer ingredients and they became adept at growing, mending, repairing and preparing. Collectively, they faced the harsh conditions they found themselves in with courage and creativity. As the skills and time of civilians became
essential to the war effort, the role of women in particular became invaluable. Housewives were urged to “Keep the home fires burning” and they were often described by politicians and journalists as “the force behind the fighting line”.

  A common cause

  The phrase “Home Front” became used to acknowledge the contribution by all civilians who were fighting battles 24 hours a day on a domestic level, with rationing, recycling, repairing, relief and assistance and war work. Everyone was encouraged to do as much as they could to help the common cause. Additionally, those men who were left at home for whatever reason did far more around the house than they had ever done before. In 1943, Good Housekeeping featured an article called “Danger – Men at Work”. It began: “Through force of circumstance men are today having to do housework. They do it ponderously and reluctantly, but still they do quite a lot of it.” The article continued that men who found themselves in the Forces having to wash up for hundreds, or even those who remained at home and helped out with the housework, began inventing new solutions to make life easier, such as changing the shapes of cups and plates to make washing and stacking simpler. Already, out of adversity, innovative ideas were emerging.

  Doing their bit

  Many civilian women served with voluntary organisations such as the Women’s Auxiliary Fire Service, the Women’s Auxiliary Police Corps and in the Air Raid Precautions (later Civil Defence) services. Others did voluntary welfare work with the Salvation Army and the Women’s Voluntary Service for Civil Defence (WVS), which had been founded in 1938 and by the start of the war had more than 300,000 volunteers. Some women joined the Special Operations Executive (SOE), which used them in high-danger roles as secret agents and underground radio operators in Nazi-occupied Europe.

  From an early age, children became involved in helping with the war effort and many were remarkably inventive and resourceful. Young children mainly helped to salvage and collect waste products for re-use, such as paper, rags, tin foil and jam jars. Older children generally helped by learning first aid, assisting the elderly to grow vegetables and to get to air raid shelters, helping in harvests, helping with home repairs, knitting items to keep soldiers warm and making much-needed splints and bandages. But of course, many children’s lives were disrupted through evacuation. By 1945, approximately 3.5 million people, mainly children, had experienced evacuation.

  The sense of purpose that developed over the war years has become legendary; from the smallest efforts to the largest, as human nature – on the whole – emerged triumphant. It was a time of great endurance and innovation. For example, making do and mending was not just about renovating old clothes; it was a mammoth operation undertaken by the majority of those remaining at home and included household repairs, making new items out of old, and inventing useful things out of what was available. And all this was undertaken by people who did not really know much about the progress of the war – they only had censored letters, newspaper reports and newsreels to rely on. Propaganda reached them and stories they heard or read about were not always clear or accurate. Uncertainty, insecurity and fear were suppressed by resolve and resilience.

  Shortages

  By early 1941 when merchant ships were being sunk at a rate of three a day, shortages were at their worst. The small amount of meat and sugar that each person in Britain was allowed was not easy to obtain, butter was reduced to two ounces a week per person, with one ounce of cheese and two ounces of tea. In 1942, Winston Churchill declared that “Tea is more important than ammunition” and advised that servicemen had as many cups as they wanted and that for them tea would be issued without restriction. But as the war continued with no sign of a breakthrough, the rationing at home had to be confronted with increased determination and imagination.

  Soon, shortages occurred in almost everything and the most unlikely items acquired rarity value. As a result, National Salvage Drives became an important feature, organised and collected by individuals from the WVS. With the threat of sudden death or maiming both at the Front and at home, an underlying sense of purpose emerged as a united feeling among the British. Overall, it is arguable that if the proud and determined battle by British civilians faced with such sacrifice and personal cost had not been fought so resolutely, the ultimate victory might not have been achieved.

  I am so grateful to the many people who have shared their stories with me, who made a vital and creative contribution to our history without even realising it. Their personal memories and indomitable spirits are an inspiration to us all.

  1

  THE HOME FRONT

  “There may be dark days ahead, and war can no longer be confined to the battlefield, but we can only do the right as we see the right…” King George VI, 3rd September 1939

  Preparing for war

  At least a year before it actually started, Britain began preparing for war. After World War One, there was an underlying sense of fear in many countries as the ideologies of Communism, Socialism and Fascism prompted violent reactions in unexpected quarters. In 1932 Shanghai was bombed by Japan and in 1937, in the Spanish Civil War, the Basque town of Guernica was bombed by Hitler’s Luftwaffe. Within a year, the British government started building new warships and increasing its arms, but it realised that another war, following on so soon from the 1914-18 Great War and the Depression of the early 1930s, would not just involve soldiers; it would disrupt and threaten the lives of civilians in Britain more than any other previous conflict. So along with building weapons and warships, the government began taking precautions against anticipated dangers and difficulties that might be faced at home.

  “Sleep quietly in your beds”

  Planning for an integrated home defence was intensified and information leaflets began being produced on practically every aspect of living. The first of these leaflets to be distributed to every British household had been drawn up in 1937. On 30th September 1938, the prime minister Neville Chamberlain returned from Germany, waving a document and declaring to waiting crowds: “This bears Herr Hitler’s name and mine, vowing that our two countries will never again go to war against each other.” That night, from a window of 10 Downing Street, he addressed more joyous crowds: “I believe it is peace for our time. Go home and sleep quietly in your beds.” Less than a year later, after continued aggression by Hitler and his forces invaded Poland, a disconsolate Chamberlain broadcast from the Cabinet Room that Hitler had defaulted on his part of the agreement and consequently, Britain was at war with Germany.

  In July 1939, every household in Britain had received four official Civil Defence pamphlets. Pamphlet number one was called Some Things You Should Know If War Should Come. While trying not to alarm readers, it outlined the main schemes being prepared by the authorities and explained that ‘it is everyone’s duty to be prepared for the possibility of war.’ The almost constant supply of information from the authorities to the public continued throughout the war, motivating, encouraging, informing, controlling and overwhelmingly trying to protect citizens and win the war. At this time most people, although realising that war was probable, did not know what to expect. They did not then know that Hitler would try to beat them into submission; that the demands on those living through it at home would be massive, leaving them exhausted and impoverished, but that they would rise to the occasion and develop a resilience and optimism that would become legendary.

  The British public at that time were more deferential and compliant than they are today. They followed the government’s advice and recommendations dutifully and unquestioningly, believing it was in the national interest to do so. From the moment war was declared, advice came pouring in from all quarters, from booklets and leaflets to magazine and newspaper articles, as well as posters, films (at the cinema) and messages on the radio (wireless). Posters showed how to put on a gas mask, how to plant vegetables, and how to collect scrap metal and they declared “coughs and sneezes spread diseases, catch your germs in your handkerchiefs”, “careless words cost lives” and �
��Be like Dad, keep Mum”. Recipes for using powdered egg, powdered potato and dried apple rings abounded and posters, radio, films and newspapers were used to keep up people’s spirits, to make the most of victories and to make fun of the enemy. This government propaganda was vital throughout the war as a means of communication and of boosting morale – and the people welcomed it – but being individuals, they also used their own ingenuity wherever they could. It was very much a period of encouraging people to help themselves and others and the abundance of information and advice was generally welcomed as support during a time of genuine fear and uncertainty.

  Austerity begins

  Before war was declared, the government encouraged all to plant vegetables on any spare land they may have to supplement the rationing that would almost certainly occur. The many pamphlets sent to households contained information on what to do in situations such as air raids or gas attacks, as well as on how to make rations stretch further and how to keep healthy. As a safety measure, from the moment war was declared, cinemas, dance halls and other places of entertainment were closed, but after widespread objections it was realised that the nation needed entertainment to sustain its spirits and within a week most had re-opened.

  One of the many early and unexpected consequences of shortages was the shrinking of newspapers. As paper rationing came into force, most newspapers diminished and for the duration of the war, the majority struggled to include more than eight pages. The Times maintained eight to 10 pages for a while; The Daily Express had between 10 to 24 pages until mid-1940, while The Star, The Evening Standard and the Daily Mirror kept to eight pages for most of the war. Naturally, all newspapers were crammed full of reports on the war’s progression, usually as much uplifting news as possible and also squeezed in were football and cricket bulletins and film and theatre reviews. Wasting no space, newspapers were invaluable as one of the primary means through which people at home found out what was happening in the war.