CHILDREN IN WAR

CHAPTER 4 - HARD TIMES

Conditions in Great Britain, during World War II, were much more desperate than they were in America. During summer, children worked on farms and people grew crops anywhere they could find space. Still there was not enough food.

A British schoolboy describes the effects of rationing on school meals:

…went from mediocre to unspeakable. We had mincemeat, potato or cabbage, some kind of milk pudding, a lot of stodge, with sauces that became more and more watery… At one stage lunch consisted of rather watery soup, based on onions, followed by hunks of bread and cheese – that was our economy measure. Good red meat, which was rationed rather strictly, we had twice a week… One wag said that… dried eggs, which were in plentiful supply, should be called dregs… Sweets were rationed, the making of ice cream banned after 1942, on the grounds that… it had no food value, and was a diversion of valuable resources. All meat became very scarce… So our diet became very monotonous. There were pies which were based on potato and carrot and – we thought it was sawdust – soya beans…’

David Howell (Quoted in Don't You Know There's A war On?: The People's Voice 1939-45 by Jonathan Croall - to be reissued in 2005)

In every country affected by the war, children had to deal with family separations, deaths of loved ones, and the need to "make do and mend" clothes and toys. However, children in Britain had added burdens as they coped with evacuations, air raids, gas masks and destroyed homes.

Beginning on September 1st, 1939 (two days before war was declared), the British government began the largest mass evacuation of people in the country's history. To avoid the terror of Hitler's nightly bombing during "The London Blitz" (which began on September 7, 1940), evacuations continued. It is estimated that parents sent about 800,000 schoolchildren into the British countryside. (Children traveled by train [the link depicts children being evacuated from Waterloo Station], often with their classmates and teachers.) Another half-million young children, with their mothers, fled London. (Scroll down 40% on this excellent "Lion, Witch and Wardrobe" study-guide. Be patient with the load time of this PDF link...it's worth it.)

It was an anguishing time. The worst night was the last night of the blitz - May 10, 1941 - when about 3,000 Londoners died.

Although America did not experience homeland bombings like Britain did (this is an almshouse flattened on February 10, 1943), the U.S. still imposed certain blackout conditions. During 1942's All Star baseball game, on July 6th, the mayor of New York City allowed play to continue until the official blackout time of 9:30 p.m.

Not only did people have to deal with curfews, blackouts, and a lack of daily commodities, they had to put up with buying necessities where the family was registered. During the war, in other words, one did not shop at the most convenient grocery store!

GO TO LAST CHAPTER   BACK TO FIRST CHAPTER   GO TO NEXT CHAPTER