No, Some adults were evacuated. Children under five would have their mum's and pregnant women were evacuated.
3
Some adults were evacuated
they got evacuated to countrysides
In excess of 300,000
The plane on which the boys were being evacuated crashed on the island during a storm and the adults (along with some of the boys) on board were killed.
About 35000 out of 45000 evacuated the city and many people did not come back.
"Due to the hazardous storm, many residents of the town evacuated to a safer location."
They were a group of schoolboys, from a variety of different school but including one group of boys who were a choir, who were being evacuated to a place of safety during a war.
Due to the hazardous storm, many of the town's residents evacuated to a safer location.
"Due to the hazardous storm that was coming in, many of the town's residents evacuated to a safer location."
Their intended destination is never stated. They were being evacuated to safety from the war. Piggy says about the possibilty of rescue, "they might have known where we were going but we never got there so they don't know where we are."
No, Some adults were evacuated. Children under five would have their mum's and pregnant women were evacuated.
During World War II, many London children were evacuated to the countryside. When a storm came the town had to be evacuated. To create a low pressure chamber, the air is evacuated from a sturdy container.
1
They continued with their normal school lessons as many of their teachers were evacuated with them.
It is thought that the boys arrived on the island by the plane, which crashed during a storm, killing all the adults on the plane. The boys were initially on the plane to be evacuated from the war. The boys were apparently being evacuated from England, which was engaged in some imagined future nuclear war against 'The Reds.' During the evacuation the plane came under attack and the pilot jettisoned the 'passenger tube,' which then crashed onto the island, leaving a scar in the jungle. The storm dragged the tube out to sea with some boys and presumably the adults still on board. The exact number of boys who survived or who were on the plane originally is never mention. When the book was written planes did not carry as many passengers as they do today, they were much smaller.