Still in London, all school children were fitted with gas masks and ran raid drills.
Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Credit: The Daily Mail.
Children wait for the next trains in Paddington Station.
Credit: Imperial War Museum
Since many parents had to continue working, only their children could be sent away. The military began Operation Pied Piper when 100,000+ teachers gathered millions of children in/near London, putting them on trains. It was a huge, logistical issue of co-ordination and control, backed by the government order of late Aug 1939.
BBC announced the school children were aged 3-13. Each child carried a gas mask, food, clothing and neck tags with name and address. There were far too many children to leave in the same evacuation day, so police and LCC school officials saw that an avenue to their platform was kept free for the children. 10,000 children left New Cross Gate Southern Station, Aldgate Metropolitan or Paddington.
Middle-class families had already arranged to send their children to live in their summer cottages, with friends and family. Or to boarding schools. But nearly everyone else had very sad memories when they left! To avoid panic, parents were ordered not to tell the young children the truth, so the kids thought that they were just going on a short school trip. Music teachers lightened the mood when the children sang cheerful travel songs eg Doing The Lambeth Walk, Wish Me Luck as You Wave Me Goodbye.
This was followed by evacuation of toddlers and their mums, expectant mums, blind and any physically handicapped people who’d received their evacuation instructions. Hospital evacuations also went smoothly. Along St Thomas' Hospital corridors, medical students wheeled 70 patients who were not seriously ill in their beds to two centres on stretchers. And many babies were among the first batch of patients removed from Guy's and Charing Cross Hospitals.
Evacuation of London schoolchildren went quite well. They cheerfully left their parents and jumped aboard for unknown but adventurous destinations. Once they arrived in their new towns, billeting officers lined the children up against a wall in the village hall while local women walked around, until the children were all chosen to stay with foster parents.
Children arriving at their destination, carrying their belongings in suitcases.
Credit: Defence Media Network.
Credit: The History Vault
With such a massive operation, naturally not everything was perfect. Parents assumed that the government had already arranged foster homes, but they really had no idea where their children would be living. Thus the children were urged to write letters as soon as possible. And even though all the children eventually learned that their parents had sent them away for their own safety, they still had to live with the fear that the family left behind in London might die.
Some of the local women sent to select foster children were apathetic, doing it only as their duty. Some foster children were given food to eat and a place to sleep separate from their new families. Some families physically abused foster children or stole their ration-cards. Thankfully research suggested only a small minority (12%) was ill-treated.
Many of these children spent 6 years of their young lives, living away from home with strangers. As it happened, many London children settled happily and maintained those links long after the war ended. Going to the cinema, learning to bake bread and camping.. remained fond memories. For many it was a life-enhancing, mind-broadening experience.
The first bombs to drop on London landed in Aug 1940, affecting Harrow etc within the London Civil Defence Area. London’s docks suffered from Day 1 of the Blitz, when German planes dropped 337 tons of bombs. Throughout the Blitz, ending in May 1941, the poorest families of the East End suffered the worst, from bombs and from fires. 448 civilians were killed that last day.
Towards the end of the war, during 1944/45, London came under heavy attack again by pilotless rockets, fired from Nazi occupied Europe. V1-2 flying bomb-drones landed in Mile End in June 1944 and continued for months. Thousands of Londoners were killed.
By Oct 1944 the government were planning for the Operation Pied Piper children to return home to London and their own parents. Had the danger had passed yet? It took months to create the Operate London Return Plan when the Ministry of Health had to arrange free transportation in trains. They were given health check-ups and food ration cards. Some of the children had grown into teenagers, and they needed to be set up with jobs when they returned home. Because of all this planning, the return of evacuees was only approved in June 1945, officially ending March 1946.
Some toddlers were only 2-3 years old when they had left their own parents, so they had grown up feeling as if their rural foster family was their real home, and they did not want to leave. For these children, the government put an emphasis on programmes like the Boy and Girl Scouts to help them re-adjust back to big-city life.
Some of the local women sent to select foster children were apathetic, doing it only as their duty. Some foster children were given food to eat and a place to sleep separate from their new families. Some families physically abused foster children or stole their ration-cards. Thankfully research suggested only a small minority (12%) was ill-treated.
Many of these children spent 6 years of their young lives, living away from home with strangers. As it happened, many London children settled happily and maintained those links long after the war ended. Going to the cinema, learning to bake bread and camping.. remained fond memories. For many it was a life-enhancing, mind-broadening experience.
The first bombs to drop on London landed in Aug 1940, affecting Harrow etc within the London Civil Defence Area. London’s docks suffered from Day 1 of the Blitz, when German planes dropped 337 tons of bombs. Throughout the Blitz, ending in May 1941, the poorest families of the East End suffered the worst, from bombs and from fires. 448 civilians were killed that last day.
Towards the end of the war, during 1944/45, London came under heavy attack again by pilotless rockets, fired from Nazi occupied Europe. V1-2 flying bomb-drones landed in Mile End in June 1944 and continued for months. Thousands of Londoners were killed.
By Oct 1944 the government were planning for the Operation Pied Piper children to return home to London and their own parents. Had the danger had passed yet? It took months to create the Operate London Return Plan when the Ministry of Health had to arrange free transportation in trains. They were given health check-ups and food ration cards. Some of the children had grown into teenagers, and they needed to be set up with jobs when they returned home. Because of all this planning, the return of evacuees was only approved in June 1945, officially ending March 1946.
Some toddlers were only 2-3 years old when they had left their own parents, so they had grown up feeling as if their rural foster family was their real home, and they did not want to leave. For these children, the government put an emphasis on programmes like the Boy and Girl Scouts to help them re-adjust back to big-city life.
Credit: Getty Images
Conclusion
Casualties estimates in 1939 were over-exaggerated, so Government propaganda caused panic, not controlled movement. But Operation Pied Piper was very successful, saving thousands of lives. And while the children who escaped had to endure their own traumas, mostly they enjoyed a better education and quality of life compared to what they would have enjoyed in London in the war. Credit: Operation Pied Piper: Mass Evacuation of Children in London in WW2 by Shannon Quinn for the history and photos







20 comments:
The evacuation of millions of children during the Operation Pied Piper at the start of World War II remains one of the most extraordinary and emotionally complex efforts to protect civilians in the face of the coming The Blitz.
Before 1940 about 11,000 children were privately funded to travel overseas, many to the US. From July-September 1940, a further 3000 were sponsored by the government to travel to the Dominions, particularly to Canada, Australia and New Zealand, before the risk from torpedo attack at sea was deemed too great. These evacuees did not just come from London, but from cities like Manchester, Birmingham and Glasgow.
This comparatively short-lived and voluntary scheme was one of many C20th child migration schemes. Some were voluntary, others enforced, and aimed to give children a 'better life': many are now the subject of ongoing inquiries into cruelty, abuse and neglect.
I have read about these evacuations before, mostly in novels, and I have always thought if my children had to be evacuated I'd go with them. I do know that wasn't possible for London parents and wondered how children would react going home after several years away and not knowing their parents if they had been sent away as young as two or three.
Oh my goodness, poor children and their parents, must have been heart breaking parting, Hels. A sad tale of war.
Sad for most of them, in one way or the other. But they survived the bombings.
I cannot imagine the anxiety parents went through having to say goodbye to the children, not knowing where they were going g or when they would be back. By coincidence I was leading a walk yesterday around Surrey Docks where the very first bombs fell during the Blitz in Sept 1940.
roentare
I am familiar with people who voluntarily saved unknown Jewish adults and children during the Holocaust, putting them in trains and transporting them to somewhere safe. Think of Nicholas Winton; Irena Sendler; Varian Fry and Raoul Wallenburg etc.
https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2009/09/sir-nicholas-winton-ordinary-man.html
https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2010/11/extraordinary-war-heroine-irena-sendler.html
https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2010/04/varian-fry-hero-and-rescuer-of.html
https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2017/12/raoul-wallenberg-great-biography.html
But Operation Pied Piper was run and paid for by the government for their own very young citizens. It was a heroic project!
History of Government
Two important issues I learned from reading your post. Many thanks.
1. Children were also sent to the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand; and
2. Children also were sent from Manchester, Birmingham and Glasgow.
River
I would definitely have left my husband and job, to be with my sons when they were young. Certainly there was no way anyone knew if adults would be bombed to death in London, if they stayed. Nor did anyone know if the children would be safe in the countryside until the war ended. But young children are our primary responsible, especially in war.
Margaret
War is tragic for everyone, particularly the elderly, the very young and the minorities (blacks, Jews, gays etc).
If soldiers are told to kill enemy soldiers in war, they do what they are ordered. But if soldiers are told to kill school children in uniform, or grandmas in old age homes, these are obscenities that can never be forgiven.
The government was totally right, prioritising children to get them out of the way of imminent bombs.
Andrew
most children taken to safety did indeed survive, and the very few that didn't, died in truck accidents, desperate depression or diseases.
Far worse was the number of people bombed to death in London (c30,000) and in other cities (c15,000). Operation Pied Piper couldn't have helped them :(
Fun60
Can you imagine the first bomber over the Surrey Commercial Docks in South London and Wapping and the Isle of Dogs on 7 September 1940??? People had been expecting the Blitz, but it must have nonetheless been the worst day in their lifetime :(
I wasn't in Sydney when the Bondi Beach Massacre happened earlier this year, but I imagine that we won't ever visit that site again.
It was an extraordinary undertaking and undoubtedly saved many young lives.
jabblog
In war it is almost impossible to know where the enemy will attack and what they will use. But a nation must defend its people with safe rooms underground or sending the children away or saving emergency food and medicine supplies. Britain did exactly the right thing by its own families. And so did the families who took the children in.
Evacuees themselves were split into four categories, focused on specific social groups deemed non-essential to war work:
1) school-age children; 2) the infirm; 3) pregnant women and 4) mothers with babies or pre-school children.
3 days before the war broke out on 31st August 1939, an evacuation order was given for the next day. Children began to assemble their belongings and meet at their schools and Operation Pied Piper commenced.
Over the country, many volunteers helped to take in evacuees. London alone had 1,589 assembly points and although most children boarded evacuation trains at their local stations, trains ran out of the capital main stations every 9 minutes for 9 hours. Some children in London were even evacuated by ship from the river Thames, sailing to ports such as Great Yarmouth, Felixstowe and Lowestoft. The process involved teachers, local authority officials, railway staff and members of the Women’s Voluntary Service, who provided practical assistance, looking after tired evacuees at stations and providing refreshments.
Eden Camp
Good grief!!! London had 1,589 assembly points and trains ran out of the main stations every 9 minutes for 9 hours. No wonder the process required the dedicated and voluntary involvement of teachers, railway workers and Women’s Voluntary Service people. Those school staff and volunteers were true heroes. (Not to mention the parents).
Boa noite minha querida amiga Helen. Obrigado pela excelente aula de história. Confesso que nunca ouvi falar, dessa evacuação, nos livros de História do Brasil. Obrigado pela sua visita e comentário. Uma excelente noite de segunda-feira, para você e todos os seus familiares. Grande abraço do seu amigo brasileiro.
Luiz
I know German and Italian submarines torpedoed and sank many Brasilian merchant ships in the Atlantic Ocean during WW2. And I know that the Brazilian Navy fought against Axis U-boats. But largely there were no bombs dropped on large Brasilian cities and there were no huge populations of children about to killed in large cities.
The Pied Piper evacuation was the most concentrated mass movement in British history; the British government, foster care and school systems were very brave and very responsible.
Beautiful blog
Thank you Rajani. It is difficult for us people in hot climates to imagine a frozen river.
By the way, I wrote a comment on your post on memories.
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