They returned home in stages. There was no official set date for them to return back to cities.
Yes a lot of children from towns and cities were evacuated to live with people in the countryside where it was assumed to be safer.they stayed until it was deemed safe to return home
Children were evacuated for their safety because of the bombings near their home, they would usually be evacuated to the countryside.
Some women went to the countryside ,similarly with their children, to work on farms. This was known as the women's land army.
On the average 45% of home schooled children return their own children to triditional schools.
The children needed to be protected from dying in the bombing blitz. The Ministry of Health came up with a program to evacuate the children, some mothers, disabled and very old people to the countryside. The "evacuees" were sent to farms and other country homes. Many of the children loved seeing farms, farm animals and the countryside for the first time. Some suffered from home sickness. It did work. After the blitz was over they came home to their parents.
The children decide to try to return to their own world by seeking out the White Witch's castle for help and guidance.
1945
The children, widows, women with need, disabled people and the elderly who were sent to the countryside during the blitz bombing were called evacuees of the evacuation.LaxGirl18:People that must leave there home country do to war and must move to another place are also referred to as refugees.
Yes they did
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 Ministry of Health was the government department that evacuated the children by trains. It was the only way to move over a million children and adults to the countryside, small villages and South Coastal towns. They were transported back to their home towns the same way.
in 1919