This is the article I have submitted to the The Kidderminster Shuttle, the local newspaper of the town in which I was born.
Whether they will print it I don't know. Hope it doesn't bore you.
Life in Kidderminster during World War II
Extracts from Aggers autobiography
War broke out in September 1939 when German forces invaded Poland but nothing much happened in England during the rest of that year and it became known then as ‘the phoney war’. At that time I was working in the Design Office of Woodward Grosvenor. (Carpet maufacturers))
When 1940 came we realised that this was no ‘phoney war’ – it was for real and could last for quite a time. By the middle of the year the realities of war were with us. Food rationing had begun, Winston Churchill was in charge and our armed forces had been evacuated from Dunkirk. The carpet factories in Kidderminster were switching to the production of war equipment and it was inevitable that carpet manufacture would soon cease altogether. I then moved to Bradley & Turton Ltd ( Engineers)as a trainee draughtsman, commencing work in the Print Room, and was kept busy making blueprints. Extra work was necessary because Shorts, the aircraft manufacturers of Belfast, moved their Design Office to Green Street, Kidderminster, as they thought it would be less likely to receive attention from German bombers than their home town. They set up office in the newly built office block of Victoria Carpets but, as they had no printing machine, they brought all their printing requirements to us, after stressing the importance of absolute security.
These were, in the words of a later U.S. President, “the dark days and darker nights when England stood alone and most men, save Englishmen, despaired of England’s life”We were not conscious of this at the time – life seemed to go along much as before. We had air raid warnings, of course, but they were mostly false alarms. At night we could hear the German bombers flying over with their characteristic low-pitched throbbing sound, and could see the searchlights fanning the darkness trying to locate them. Sometime we could hear bombs exploding in the distance or the cracking sound of anti-aircraft guns.
At Bradley & Turtons we were ready to receive any German parachutists. (The warning that an invasion had started was to be the ringing of the church bells, which were otherwise silent throughout the war years). Notices were posted around the factory advising workers, in the event of an invasion, to arm themselves with ‘a twelve inch length of ¾ inch hydraulic piping’. An air raid shelter was dug out at the top of the 'Round Hill' adjoining the factory. Ron Hill, the man in charge of the Cost Office was sent on a plane-spotters course and when the sirens sounded he positioned himself on top of the hill armed with a pair of binoculars with which to scan the skies looking for enemy planes. If he spotted one, he gave a hand signal to someone standing on the footpath outside the lower factory gates in Park Lane. That person, in turn, had to pass on the signal to the timekeeper waiting outside the time office opposite Brinton Park gates, who who would run to his phone and ring up Nobby Clark, the Chief Draughtsman, who would then press the button to sound the signal for the workers to leave their work and take shelter. With hindsight, not a very clever arrangement.
Outside working hours, we all became involved in the war effort in various ways. The Chief Draughtsman, Horace Pessoll was an officer in the local division of the Local Defence Volunteers (VLC) soon to be renamed the Home Guard. They regularly did night-duties guarding the Elan Valley aqueduct where it crossed the Severn just above Bewdley. Another colleague, Harold Taylor, was an Air Raid Warden.
An ARP Warden had to patrol the streets at night to make sure that all house windows were properly blacked out. During a raid he would report any incidents to the Civil Defence Control Centre, which would then organise the various emergency services. His equipment included a whistle to warn of a gas attack and a stirrup pump with which to fight fires should incendiary bombs be used. I did my bit helping to man the Civil Defence Control Centre. My work there involved keeping records of the Air Raid Wardens on duty in various parts of the town – they phoned in when they started their shift or when there were any incidents to report. I worked on a rota system one night a week but I was also on a standby rota for duties whenever the air raid sirens sounded during the night.
England managed to survive the most traumatic episode in its long history. 1940 passed and England had survived the heavy air raids on London and had won the Battle of Britain. Our ‘island fortress’ was still intact, though badly battered. 1941 was well under-way and the onslaught of the German fighting machine continued unabated. In April came the devastating bombardment of Coventry – we could hear the sounds of the explosions and see flashes lighting up the horizon. We knew someone was getting it pretty badly. Heavy air raids continued on London and the House of Commons was destroyed.
For people living in Kidderminster, however, life continued almost unchanged. Shopping was a problem, of course. The German blockade of our shipping meant that food supplies, even those items not rationed, were in short supply. (Children born in 1940 had to wait until they were five or six years old before they even saw a banana.) Rationing ensured that we all had a balanced diet, and meat intake could often be supplemented by the occasional rabbit or chicken bought on the ‘black market‘. Every Sunday morning, after church, I would cycle to a farm near Hart;ebury and return with a dozen ‘black market’ eggs in my saddlebag. Shopping routines continued more or less as before but there was more queuing. Whenever we saw a queue in the town we would tag on to the end of it, not even knowing what we were queuing for! Although meat was rationed, offal was not and this was often the reward for the wait. Everyone served received the same small quantity.
As the war dragged on, so the range of items subject to rationing grew. The German blockade continued but huge shipping convoys from America, crossing the Atlantic, heavily protected, ensured that we did not starve. A few new items were added to our diets, for example dried eggs. These were not too bad for use in baking but fried for breakfast they resembled edible soft leather. We also had, from the USA, large tins of chopped pork. These contained a core of consolidated chopped meat with a thick outer layer of dripping. Mother used to carefully scrape off all this fat and use it for making pastry, which she then filled with the meat to make little pork pies shaped like sausage rolls. They were delicious.
Walking out after dark did not worry us at all, in spite of the blackout. No street lamps or shop windows were lit, and if a hand torch was used it had to be dimmed with a double thickness of greaseproof paper. Where there were trees on the pavement, whitewash was painted on the trunks so that you would not bump into them. During that period one never heard of anyone being attacked or robbed.
As the war proceeded and more and more men were conscripted for national service, farmers had problems in carrying out their vital job of providing the nation’s food requirements, and desperately needed extra hands. To cater for this requirement, the Voluntary Land Corp (VLC) was brought into being. In Kidderminster it was organised by Sid Edwards, a teacher at Harry Cheshire School, where my sister Thelma taught. The idea was that civilians formed working parties to help out on farms during the evenings and at weekends. Farmers paid for the work done but the money was donated to worthy causes, of which there were many during the war. My sister persuaded me to join and I found the work so much fun that I had no problem in getting my work mates, Harold Taylor and Gerald Clements, to become members too. In the evenings we would go to near-by farms and travel by car or sometimes on a trailer drawn by the farmer’s tractor. On Sundays a lorry-load of us would go further, singing the good old wartime songs as we went along, with lunch sandwiches stuffed in our pockets. Those were happy days!
Duties on the farms were varied. All too often it was beet singling – shuffling along rows of young sugar beet plants and deftly (sometimes!) removing enough of them to leave single specimens suitably spaced out. This was the most boring task imaginable. Other jobs were much preferred, such as fruit picking, although this work was inclined to stain one's lips! At harvest time the work became heavier. In the cornfields the crop was bound into bundles by the reaping machine and we had to arrange them into upright groups, called stooks, so that they could dry out prior to the threshing process. This was not too difficult a task, but the action of fusing the heads of two bundles firmly together in an inverted V shape produced a multitude of facial abrasions and scratches. Loading bales of hay on to the top of a wagon was certainly tiring work.
At that time we only had one week’s annual holiday – the week containing August Bank Holiday, then the first Monday in August. Real holidays were hardly possible during the war years. All coastal areas were out of bounds to civilians anyway. When the VLC organised an agricultural holiday camp for its members, we three lads jumped at the chance. It was based at Honeybourne in the Vale of Evesham. We slept in bell tents and were taken out every day to work on farms. This may not sound much of a holiday but it was most enjoyable. The atmosphere was wonderful.
Due to the camp’s position, there was plenty of fruit picking, also potato picking and thistle slashing. One day when it rained we were ferried to a local canning and jam factory. My task here was putting plums into cans and placing them on a conveyor belt, which went through the machine that heated them and soldered on the tops. Only sound fruit were put into the cans. Any that was damaged or rotten went into skips that ended up in the jam-making department! I also saw barrels of strawberry seeds that were added to the vats of boiled up fruit so that it could be labelled as strawberry jam. Still, we used to justify many things in those days with the expression ‘There is a war on’.
Last thing at night we would queue up for a mug of cocoa and a couple of ship’s biscuits. Standing around in groups, sipping our night drink and dunking our rock-hard biscuits, we talked over the events of the day and discussed the war news we had read about in the papers. These were magical moments that can never be erased from my memory. We enjoyed the experience so much that we signed up for next year’s camp. This was based at Inkberrow and was very similar to the previous year
By 1942 the USA had joined the conflict and their armed forces began to arrive ‘over here’. That was when the invasion of our town began. True, there had already been an influx of strangers to the town, but life had continued much as before. When the American soldiers arrived here we certainly noticed a change then. They had a camp nearby and every Saturday evening they flooded into town in droves. Our ballroom dances were never the same again. The amount of dance floor available for normal dancing was seriously reduced as more and more Yanks found girls willing to engage in Jitterbugging. To do this meant that a girl had to be prepared to be thrown about on the dance floor, often displaying her knickers to all and sundry. We were not amused. Worse still was the fact that some girls actually used to go out with these men, who were certainly better dressed than our soldiers, who appeared to be dressed in sackcloth by comparison. They also had more money to spend. Then, in addition to the inevitable chewing gum, they were able to produce those coveted nylons. The best our serving lads could produce for their girlfriends was the occasional piece of parachute silk that could be made up into either a blouse or a pair of French knickers. Several local girls did find real romance with the Yanks and when the war ended these ‘GI brides’ were shipped to the States, some to be bitterly disappointed and some to be well pleased.
Our drawing boards at work were by sash windows looking out onto the road. Through these windows we watched the rest of the world go by; - the endless convoys of British Army vehicles; an occasional large transporter, known as a ‘Queen Mary’, carrying aircraft wings or a fuselage to or from the nearby RAF storage depot ; the American army convoys with their immaculately-dressed officers in their Jeeps and, a rare sight for us, black men! We hadn’t seen any before, except when Sanders of the River came to the local cinema.
The Yanks often waved to us and shouted things like ‘Is this the way to ‘War-sester?’ (Worcester). They even threw packets of chewing gum at us sometimes, if our windows were open.
My recollections of the war years will be dramatically different from those who were in the ‘sharp end’ of the conflict. (I was unable to join the armed forces because I was in a Reserved Occupation ). Of course, at the time we all took a profound interest in the traumatic events that were taking place and eagerly read the papers and listened to the radio news bulletins every evening. The Sunday night Nine o’clock News, by the way, always started with the playing of the National Anthems of the Allies and of those countries that had been overrun by the Germans. As the war progressed, the number of tunes grew, until it was turned half past nine before the reading of the news commenced. We were, of course, only told news that the 'powers that be' decided we should hear but we could often read between the lines. If we had our fears we didn’t talk about them.
For anyone who has not experienced six years of total war it will be hard to imagine the relief' and joy we experienced when it was all over. 1945 brought victory in Europe (VE) and, a few months later, victory in Japan (VJ). There were celebrations everywhere; parties and dancing in almost every street. Huge bonfires were built in side streets and everyone went mad, singing and dancing round the fires through the night. It was great to be able to tear down the blackout materials from our windows and see them consumed by flames.
With peace came a relaxation of the censorship that had controlled the information we were allowed to receive, and the full horror of the loss of life and the sufferings of people in so many countries became known. It made us realise just how fortunate we had been here in this sleepy little town in the middle of England. True, we had had a few bombs dropped in the area – I think the count was just over thirty – but I cannot recall any serious casualties or deaths. An unexploded one was unearthed here many years later when the river bridge in Worcester Road was widened for the new dual carriageway.
Things began to change quite soon. The Yanks said goodbye, taking back to America enough memories to enable Hollywood to go on producing war films for the next fifty years, explaining how the Yanks had once again won a world war. They also left us more space in our dance halls for real dancing! The Voluntary Land Corp was no longer required and was disbanded. The Labour Party won the General Election in no uncertain fashion.
But Bradley & Turtons carried on just the same as ever.