Remembering the war times on the Wirral. Do you have stories to share?
Bombings, Air Raids, Food, Housing, and the list goes on.
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Can you imagine in this day and age of fast food,hypermarkets and All you can eat buffets surviving on war time rations. How would you and your family cope?
These varied slightly from month to month, as foods became more or less plentiful. Then following is the weekly ration for an adult: Bacon and ham 4oz (100gm) Meat to the value of 1s 2d (6p today). Sausages were not rationed but difficult to obtain, offal was originally unrationed but sometimes formed part of the meat ration. Butter 2oz (50gm) Cheese 2oz (50gm) sometimes this rose to 4oz (100gm) and even up to 8oz (225 gm) Margarine 4oz (100gm) Cooking fat 4oz (100gm) often dropping to 2oz ( 50gm) Milk 3 pints (1800ml) sometimes dropping to 2 pints (1200ml) Sugar 8oz (225gm) Preserves 1 lb (450gm) every 2 months Tea 2oz (50gm) Eggs 1 shell egg a week if available but at times dropping to 1 every 2 weeks Dried eggs 1 packet each 4 weeks Sweets 12oz (350gm) each 4 weeks In addition there was a monthly points system. Babies and younger children, expectant and nursing mothers, had concentrated orange juice and cod liver oil from Welfare Clinics together with priority milk. This milk was also available to invalids. School meals were started during the war years to make quite certain that school children had the best possible main meal as most mothers were working long hours for the war effort.
It all makes perfect sense expressed in dollars and cents ,pound shillings and pence
I can remember those days - just. Although I was too young to know much about food rationing, I certainly knew about the sweet ration, which from my memory was 2 oz. a week, not 3 oz., but I daresay it varied. I do remember being sent to queue at the butcher's when word went round that he might be getting some offal (tough old ox liver probably), or sausages, or tripe; ugh! Had to queue at the grocer's too. Even though you had an entitlement to something, it didn't mean it was always available, hence the queues which you had to stand in for over an hour sometimes. We all seemed to keep reasonably healthy & you didn't see any fat people! I've got a bid in for some wartime ration books. If I win, I'll be able to scan them & post them here.
My grandfather lived in Union street in Wallasey close to the river.In those days he had several jobs and responsibilties as well as his day job as a window cleaner he also worked as a part-time park-keeper in Central park.In his local neighbourhood he acted as a fire spotter and helped the elderly in to the shelters during the blitz. One night during the blitz the sirens went and as usual he jumped out of bed got his family down to the shelter and went back to help the old lady who lived two doors up.On his way back the bombs started to fall as he neared the shelter he noticed that a incendary bomb had landed at the front of the next door neighbour's house and had ignited the front door ,so doing the decent thing he risked his own life to get water and extinguish the fire before it caused too much damage. Imagine my grandfathers horror after the all clear was given and he informed the neighbour of what he had done ,instead of praise the neighbour punched him square in the jaw and said thats for ruining the carpet.
It all makes perfect sense expressed in dollars and cents ,pound shillings and pence
I think it must have been right at the end of rationing. I remember being sent by my mother to a house in the next road (Prenton Dell Rd). I had to knock at the back door and get a 2 lbs bag of sugar. Impressed on me to keep it out of sight when walking back ! Can't remember how much it was, but looking back on it, I guess I was just keeping the old Blackmarket ticking over.
Sweets were still on ration. Remenber the shopkeepers always had a small pair of scissors on a bit of string. These were for cutting out your coupon from the book.
Seem to recall that I and most of my friends in the road were like galloping hairpins. No fatties then !
I look in the mirror now and wonder when did it all go wrong.
I can't remember being hungry during the war. Lots of people had allotments, so vegetables were quite plentiful. I remember there were large allotments on Kings Rd., Higher Bebington, between Cavendish Drive & Princes Boulevard. I used to go there with sixpence or a shilling (a shilling was 5 new pence), & come back with whatever was in season. Incidentally, the site of those allotments is still there, overgrown but undeveloped; don't know why, I would have thought it would be prime building land. (Memo to self: find out why). Close to our house, what is now the Mount Estate was allotments too & many people kept a few chickens for the eggs. When the chickens were too old to lay, they would be boiled (too old & tough to roast). This gave a big pan of soup & the meat would be put in a pie. I'm pretty certain there are still allotments off Prenton Rd. West, behind the Rovers' ground. Another site that was allotments was all of Birkenhead Park north of Ashville Rd. Incidentally, if I remember correctly, bread wasn't rationed until after the end of the war & it was years before rationing ended completely. Of course, there were always criminals like Pinzgauer's mum who would buy stuff on the black market. I'm sure my parents would never have done such a thing
Here's a pic. from my family album. (No.22 is my gran's house). Some of the kids appearing to give the 'V' sign are copying Winston Churchill's famous Victory gesture. The subtle difference, which has escaped the kids, is that Churchill's sign was given with the palm facing outwards. Lots of streets had brick built air raid shelters. It was later claimed that they were so poorly built that if a bomb fell near, you'd be safer outside, otherwise you'd end up under a pile of bricks.
love seeing and hearing all this sort of stuff, apparently in the war my great aunts and nan and great nan on this side were all involved in nursing. the name St Caths was always mentioned, and a Mill Lane, all i know is these were in Birkenhead and Wallesey, other than that I know nothing about them in war time. I do however have a Maltese grandad who until he died always told us he came here after the war due to shipping and we always assumed he meant building them at Cammell Lairds, turns out he was hiding in his little room in Valletta, Malta sending Britain infomation regarding the shipping movements of the Germans to North Africa from Italy supplying Rommell to fight Monty. Britain granted him citizen ship after the war. My french side was Involved in the Resistance and dad grew up knowing he lost a few aunts and uncles in the war, there was never a mention of the war when papa was around, it was to painful for him but when he died my Dad told me some of the things they did and some pictures, I have some back home and will did some out. The things they did made me realise that why i get excited everytime i hear the word 'sabotage'
All hail the posting King and thou Wiki Wirral Bumper sticker will be displayed with pride
Interesting stuff placid both hospitals are still there but are mainly only used for outpatients ,the elderly and in the case of Mill Lane a minor injuries unit.
It all makes perfect sense expressed in dollars and cents ,pound shillings and pence