The evacuees were children and specific adults who evacuated from London and other towns to protect them from being killed by the bombs Hitler kept sending to England. In the English language evacuees is the proper reference for the people who had to evacuate. We would not say evactuationers or evatuators.
Well.... Imagine being taken from your parents at a young age. It was painful for many. But some evacuees got lucky and stayed with nice families. + They were safe from the Blitz in London.
No, Chelsea was not a common name for evacuees during World War II. The term "evacuees" typically refers to children and individuals evacuated from urban areas in the UK to safer rural locations to escape bombings. Most evacuees were given temporary names or identified by their hometowns rather than specific names like Chelsea. The name Chelsea is primarily associated with a district in London rather than being a prevalent name among evacuees.
get some card and put on your name and attach ssome string done
The evacuees were evacuated on the 3rd of September 1939
Evacuees in WW2 were allowed teddies. Many pictures of evacuees boarding the trains have children with teddies.
The evacuee's name, their parents, their host families, their destination and where they are from.
A name tag is somthing what evacuees had to were in ww2 so people would now how the kids are
The evacuee name tag typically includes the evacuee's name, contact information, any relevant medical conditions or allergies, and a designated meeting point or assembly area. This information is crucial for emergency responders and officials to quickly identify and assist evacuees during an evacuation process. Additionally, the name tag may also include a unique identifier or barcode for tracking and accountability purposes.
The evacuees brought their own sugar purchased with their ration cards. They were not going to leave it behind since it was a precious commodity. They had to bring their ration cards too. Unfortunately some unscrupulous people stole food and ration cards from the evacuees.
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.
Well.... Imagine being taken from your parents at a young age. It was painful for many. But some evacuees got lucky and stayed with nice families. + They were safe from the Blitz in London.
quote from James Roffey says; 'We marched to Waterloo Station behind our head teacher carrying a banner with our school's name on it, We all thought it was a holiday, but the only thing we couldn't work out was why the women and girls were crying.'i found that on a website about evacuees.. :)
Evacuee was the label the Ministry of Health designated for the kids who were evacuated to the country. They sent them there to avoid the dangerous bombing during the Blitz. There were also adults with small children, elderly people and disabled people who were evacuees.
it was children from the outside
so there parent would no wear they are and they need to no there home adress but young people dont no so it comes in handy and also they need to be account for when they reach there destinations this is wrote by a 11 yr old girl btw
how many calories did an evacuee get a day
get some card and put on your name and attach ssome string done