September 1938
Any shelter that was in a deep underground station.
Many people sheltered in the London Underground (commonly known as "The Tube").
there where two air raid shelters one was the Morrison shelter which looked like a table the other was the Anderson shelter which was underground
Tick, tick tick BOOM!
Air raid shelter are often made in every country especially near strategically important areas/VIPs locations. However for general public air raid shelter are made when a country fears/participate in a war.
An air raid shelter is an underground shelter from bombing. During the last war the sirens would go off to tell people the German bombers were coming and they would all grab their gas masks and the children and rush to the nearest air raid shelter. This might be a home made one in the garden or one made by the council in the local park or an underground railway station or, in the case of Stockport near Manchester, caves dug out of the rock under the town.
The Anderson Shelter was the first shelter that was given in World War 2 but i don't really remember the other air raid shelter
Public shelters were available for people to use. They sometimes used schools, church halls, and other public buildings, Underground (tube) stations were used at night for people to sleep in and get respite from the bombing. At home, people with a back garden were issued with an Anderson Shelter and people without a back garden had a Morrison Shelter.
They were shelters either underground or in your house or outside in your front or back garden. They were mostly made out of corrugated metal or iron for the roofs and usually metal for the walls and there were wooden stools/ seats/ bench's etc.. . and if a air raid went off they would probably stay in for a few hours.
they went into there bomb shelter
You can read the British air raid shelter in the attached link below.
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