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.
The two types of air raid shelters are called the Anderson shelter and the Morrison shelter
The Anderson Shelter And The Morrison Shelter
nothing
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
Air raids are where planes fly over cities or towns and bomb them. There is no raid as such, but the place is bombed. This is why there are places called air raid shelters, either steadily built above ground or dug in below ground where people could hide from the bombing.
The two types of air raid shelters are called the Anderson shelter and the Morrison shelter
Anderson and Morrison shelter
Anderson and Morrison.
One is the Anderson shelter
because Dr. David Morrison invented them
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
no
Rarely but yes some air raid shelters during the blitz did have carpets. There were many types of shelters in WW2 such as the Anderson and Morrison shelters but many shelters included basements and even rail way tubes. Though carpets were never used in the rail way tubes a few private shelters did include carpet however most were basic.
One was if you had a big enough garden and the other for if you didn't.
The Anderson Shelter And The Morrison Shelter
checkers and cards
Only what families decided to take in with them.