yes, yes they did.
No because it was a military town and had a military cemetery. All the evacuees were sent to locations that did not have any military presence or manufacturing.
i don't know hte @nswer. looking for the same answer for my ww2 homework. :( scottish evacuees were sent to main part of Scotland to fight off the Japanese in planes with ak ak guns hoped this helped :) sorry that was soldiers scottish evacuees were sent to countryside such an hils and the highlands
letters that were delivered to the soilder's families
Sgt. William Baxter LCorp. Thomas Bates Thats All I know ;)
evacuees were sent away because if they lived in aberdare or swansea or a big city / town in wales / UK they would be sent away because of bombs dropping if they were baby's there mother would go away with them but if they was not a baby they would go alone ok ...x
No because it was a military town and had a military cemetery. All the evacuees were sent to locations that did not have any military presence or manufacturing.
They got a letter sent to them saying that they had to take in evacuees because of the world war 2.
they were sent back to their parents
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.
Evecuee
they got sent away with a pack lunch
i don't know hte @nswer. looking for the same answer for my ww2 homework. :( scottish evacuees were sent to main part of Scotland to fight off the Japanese in planes with ak ak guns hoped this helped :) sorry that was soldiers scottish evacuees were sent to countryside such an hils and the highlands
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.
Yes, many did.
Many were sent to Ilfracome in Devon. I was one of them. Norm Matthews.
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.
Evacuees had to try to fit in with other children and their families so that they wouldn't feel more emotional about having to leave home. Second answer: The evacuees were primarily sent to farms and country villages. They had to learn to do farm chores and how to play safely in the country. Most of the evacuees had decent experiences but some were abused, had their ration cards stolen from them or were made fun of by the other children or the host families. Some spent hours writing to their families.