Elmdon Boy
master brummie
That steel shelter Viv says up to 4 people. Must have been very tight for four adults.
That steel shelter Viv says up to 4 people. Must have been very tight for four adults.
Great fun though.
Especially if you were the only male!
Great fun though.
I think the steel ones must have been used, as I've seen examples in two separate museums. The one below was at the Amberley Industrial museum. would not have liked being cooped up in one though.
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Gosh I can smell that horrible rubbery smell now, that and the dentists anaesthetic.....yeeeuurk!! But the point of the reply what or where were the neutral areas of Birmingham?
VivThink they must have been those areas outside the map below Bob. As I understand it there were 3 zones: evacuation, neutral and reception areas. I've started to pull together a few bits about what happened with the opening/closing/sharing of schools as a result of evacuation. Here's a start on a few of the 'neutral' schools. Viv.
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I know that many of the houses that were built in during the first half of the twentieth century had a cupboard beneath their wooden staircases which many found useful as a temporary/makeshift shelter.
We had one of those we called it the Bogey Hole. We had bunk beds in there, me and my brother slept in there once the worst of the bombing was over. At the worst part we all slept in the Anderson shelter at the top of the back garden.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/58/a4325258.shtmlCan’t see any mention in the Tread of “Shelter rash.”