only by writing to Their address.
All the time
yes, yes they did.
After the battle Britain :)
Labels were tied on to evacuees when they left home
yes they did write letters home
It would have been officials in the Home Office
No they didn't unless they went home which was rare :) hope it was help full
There may have been evacuees but no one has any prove. Except for in 1917 when two girls sent a letter home to their brother but no one knows if they were just on holiday or if they actually been evacuated.
The evacuees went to these locations: Dorset, Somerset, Devon, Cornwall, all of Wales, The Lake District in the Northwest, The Highlands of Scotland, and the south coast. Some places the children and adults were evacuated to such as Plymouth and Bristol were bombed so they had to move the kids again to other places.
they still weren't allowed home
During World War II, A.A. Milne and his wife opened their home, Cotchford Farm, to around 60 child evacuees from London. These children had been sent to the countryside for safety during the bombings of London.
The return of evacuees to their families varied depending on the context, but during World War II, many children evacuated from cities in Britain began returning home around 1945, following the end of the war. Specific timelines could differ based on individual circumstances and the safety of the areas they returned to. In general, once the threat of bombing had diminished and conditions improved, families were reunited.