Because the cities were being bombed by the Germans and so they were not safe there
safer places like smaller towns and villages where it can be less chance to be bombed like Ashford in england Datchet in england Tonypandy in south wales e.c.t
Into the countryside
to the country sidethey were evacuated to the countryside
The children were sent to the country to live with people there. Some were sent to Ireland and the United States. These were children of the more wealthier families. The children who were evacuated from London and other towns were called evacuees.
Towns, farms and villages whose distruction had no strategic advantage to the enemy and were therefore less likely to be attacked.
If you are asking where children from the cities being bombed or likely to be bombed in WWII were evacuated to, then the answer is the countryside. We had a few cockney evacuees in my village. We treated them like aliens from Mars. no loser
The evacuees were evacuated on the 3rd of September 1939
Labels were tied on to evacuees when they left home
People, children included, were evacuated to the countryside on trains. They were met by officials and taken to homes and farms. The people put up the evacuees until the blitz boming ended.
They were away from their parents.
The first children were evacuated from Britain's cities and other vulnerable sites, to places of safety, in September 1939, just before war was declared. This was called Operation Pied Piper. Most went to places in the British countryside but some went as far away as Canada. They traveled by train to the countryside.
some did some didn't
In England they were evacuated to countryside areas in the Lincolnshire Yorkshire and nottinghamshire
Children were evacuated for their safety because of the bombings near their home, they would usually be evacuated to the countryside.
safer places like smaller towns and villages where it can be less chance to be bombed like Ashford in england Datchet in england Tonypandy in south wales e.c.t
Children were evacuated from the cities to the countryside to avoid the bombing.
about one and a half million children