Thursday, May 20, 2021

Childhood memories of WWII in Aberystwyth

Pat Marise James was born at home in South Road, Aberystwyth, on 4th November 1934.  Pat’s mother was English and her father was Welsh, so she grew up speaking English and at home.  The family owned a grocers shop in South Road, Ellesmere Stores (they were the second owners, the first being three Evans sisters, now Lotus Electronics.)  Her mother worked in the shop from 1933 right up until the 1970s, when her parents retired and went on a round the world trip Pat was an only child and said she was very spoilt.

During WWII, her father was stationed at Aberporth and drove the lorries that transported rockets for testing at Ynys Las. The lorry used to stop of at her parent’s shop and the soldiers would have a cup of tea on the way. Her father was an electrician and before the war had worked in Malaya with his brother, ‘Uncle Llew,’ but both returned to Britain before war broke out. Pat’s parents at one time though about emigrating to New Zealand but her gran, who died before Pat was born, bought them the shop ‘to make them stay.’

Pat remembers seeing rows of jam jars outside the shop, left by people to be filled with foodstuff s like jam and pickled onions.  She said there was a local black market in Aberystwyth and in the summer, farmers would bring vegetables to the shop, carrots, peas, in in the winter, broad beans and swedes, and even meat, when they’d killed a pig or a lamb. In return her mother would give them things like sugar and butter.  So it was a sort of exchange of whatever you had. Pat would sit on the stairs and watch local shopkeepers come to ‘James the Grocers’ and no money would change hands.  Pat’s uncle Dick ran Clarks shoe shop and he would give shoes in exchange for sugar.  All the shopkeepers were known by the shops they kept – James the Bara, Tommy Swan the Butcher, etc.   People had to be registered to a shop and buy the appropriate goods there – ie, if someone was registered to buy groceries from Pat’s mother’s shop, they couldn’t go elsewhere to buy them.

Pat never remembers going without and although there was rationing, they had plenty of food, eggs and bacon.  She still has her ID card, and her gasmask, made of rubber and tin, hung in the garage for years after the war.  She thinks she had to collect this mask from a house that was being used as some sort of war office in Bridge Street, next to the Black inn, and was shown how to put it on there too.  At the beginning of the war at least, she thinks she took this mask to school with her, but thinks this precaution didn’t last for long. She went to the local Board School, still standing in Alexandra Road. The boys’ school was at one end, the mixed infants in the other, and the girls’ at the other end. 

 

Pat's ID card cover

 

ID card interior pages

 
In double summer time, when it was still light at midnight, she remembers they’d all go to South Prom and watch the German bombers flying past on the way to bomb Liverpool. Her dad used to say that if they decided to drop a bomb on Aberystwyth, they’d have ‘had it.’ She remembers there was an air raid shelter on a patch of green behind the castle and the Old College but doesn’t think she ever went there during an actual air raid but they had to go there to practice, because she remembers there were wooden laths to sit on. After the war, her father had these and turned them into shelves in the shop.

After Dunkirk, many soldiers were stationed in Aberystwyth and, until a proper canteen was provided for them in the drill hall, they used to come around to the local shops with their billycans. Pat remembers sitting on the stairs and watching them coming to the side door of her parents shop and having cawl, and five Woodbines or Weights cigarettes. The neighbours also helped to make cawl for the soldiers.  They soldiers didn’t pay for any of this, Pat said, and all the shopkeepers in the town gave food and cigarettes for free to help out. 

South Marine Terrace housed army soldiers rescued from Dunkirk, while RAF personnel were billeted on Marine Terrace. Pat remembers lots of American soldiers in the town too but didn’t know where they were stationed.  All the children used to ask them for bubble gum and they always got some.  One of Pat’s friends, Myfanwy Hughes, whose parents ran a fish and chip shop, married a ‘Yank’ and later emigrated to the US.

On VE day, Pat remembers they all went to the King’s Hall and the whole town turned out to celebrate. Boys rolled up newspapers, set them alight, and kicked them around on the beach. 

 

Pat, on left marked with a x, at South Road VE party, 1946. Next to her is Brenda Jenkins

She said the war didn’t really register with her, she was too young to know what it was all about, and they all got on with their lives. Aberystwyth was a small town and many, like her family, were in business and they just carried on.  Some things she remembers clearly, eg, not being able to sleep at midnight because it was too light and the lack of street or car lights.  Her mother had some proper blackout material which were used as curtains and Pat still has these. 

 

Pat's mother's blackout material

 
She remembers that there was a War Office in Queen’s road where her parents had to collect their ration coupons for the food allocated to the shop.  Children used to get a monthly allocation of a ¼ pound of sweets but Pat pinched strips off the coupons of her school friends and was getting ¼ pound of sweets a week from Payne’s sweet shop in Llanbadarn Road, until the shopkeeper went to her father and asked if he was giving her sweet coupons!  Her father cut her sweet rations as a punishment.

Pat’s uncle Aeron fought in Tripoli and survived the war, later becoming head of the National Insurance Office in Aberystwyth.  Her mother’s brother Will was in the navy and he later became a coastguard in the town.  Pat and her daughter Marise also served in the coastguards later on, in the 1970s. They would watch for boats in trouble, Pat from her home and Marise from the castle, and phone the lifeboat if there was an incident.

Pat remembers there was an incident involved a submarine that had to be towed to safety off Aberystwyth. Her parents must have been involved with rescuing the sailors because later the wife of one of them brought round a bunch of flowers for her mother and a pink covered book for her to say thank you.  This was probably H.M Submarine Universal that got into trouble off Cardigan Bay in February 1946.

Another memory Pat has was of a morning just after the end of the war when the Daily Mirror newspaper arrived, the paper her father took, and her mother hid it right at the top of the shelves in the storeroom. Pat had been sent outside but she saw her mother doing this and later got the ladder and went up to look at the newspaper. It had the story of the liberation of Belsen Concentration Camp, which was why her mother had tried to hide it from Pat. This incident was just after the war.  Her parents never talked about the war in the front of her.

In 1959, after she’d married her husband, Philip, Pat’s parents bought them a house, 2 South Marine Terrace. A Mr and Mrs Owen had lived there and were registered to her parent’s shop, and when they moved, they asked them if they wanted to buy No 2. When Pat moved in, they found army officers had written (graffiti) on all the available walls upstairs. Unfortunately, with hindsight, she said, it was all decorated over and lost due to modernisation.  She thinks numbers 1 and 3 also billeted officers. Pat wanted to run a guest house and that’s what No. 2 became and her husband, who’d completed his two years National Service, became a painter and decorator. 

Blog by Kate Sullivan based on a telephone interview with Pat James in February 2021 



 

Thursday, May 6, 2021

The Reminiscences of Tony Bird as an Evacuee in Lampeter 1939 - 1942

Tony Bird was evacuated to Lampeter at the very beginning of 1940, when he was 16 years old. He was born in Cowbridge but at the time of the outbreak of  the Second World War he was a pupil at Wycliffe College, a boarding school in Stonehouse, Gloucestershire.  The premises of Wycliffe College  were chosen as suitable for the relocation of the Air Ministry which needed to be moved out of London to avoid the danger of bombing. The decision was made late in 1939 to move the whole of Wycliffe College to St David’s College in Lampeter.


St David's College building

As Tony was already used to living away from home at his boarding school, the idea of evacuation did not come as much of a shock to him, as it must have done to the many children who were accustomed to living at home. Tony was one of three children in his family, but his brother and sister being older than him were not involved in evacuation plans. His parents, used to his being away from home in term time, were not too concerned about the change of location.

It was Tony’s father who took him to Lampeter for the first time for the start of term in 1940.  They travelled by car, and no doubt in those days his father would have had a problem getting petrol for a  fairly lengthy journey. Tony remembers that his father, unfamiliar with the local roads in Wales, went too fast over a hump backed bridge  -  he thinks it was probably at Pumpsaint - and Tony sitting at the back was thrown up and hit his head hard on the roof of the car.

Tony’s first impressions of the rooms in St Davids College were that they were spartan. Two boys shared each little study  room. The winter of 1940 was exceptionally severe and the communal bathrooms in particular were bitterly cold, the boys sometimes having to unfreeze the taps in order to get water to wash. One positive memory of that winter though was that the boys were able to go skating. A lake on the outskirts of Lampeter froze over for about six weeks and it seems that an enterprising iron-monger’s shop in Lampeter was able to get a supply of skates for people to buy.

The adjustment to living in a new place was not difficult for Tony, as the entire school had been brought to Lampeter, including all the staff, their wives and children, and lessons continued exactly as they had been before. He describes the experience as the school  having  been “ transplanted”. There was very little mixing with local people, the school being quite self contained, for example, the college did its own catering. Food was very basic and filling, a typical staple being macaroni cheese.  Tony does not recall any particular contact with the Welsh language but remembers encountering more spoken Welsh on visits to Carmarthen than in Lampeter.

The headmaster W.H. Sibley was quite a free thinker and the boys seem to have had some freedom, for example, film shows were held in the school from time to time and pupils could invite a guest. Tony has amusing memories of inviting a girl called Gwyneth to these evenings.

The  way in which more regular contact did occur with others in the local area was through sporting events, especially rugby and cricket matches, when Tony’s school teams would travel to places such as Carmarthen or Brecon. He remembers rugby matches against the theology students who had had to move out of their accommodation so that Wycliffe College could take it over.  Apparently the students were quite a rough bunch as rugby players, being older than the school boys, but in spite of that  the young ones did achieve one or two notable victories over them. A talented school friend of Tony’s called Gilbert Parkhouse later became  a well known sportsman who played cricket  for Glamorgan and in seven test matches for England in the 1950s.

Tony recalls a few surprising escapades that he was involved in whilst in Lampeter - all of  which were strictly against school rules. On one occasion he decided with friends to hitchhike to Tenby. They reached Tenby without a problem but on the way back they got stuck at Haverfordwest and had to start  walking back to Lampeter. Fortunately before long they did manage to find another lift and arrived back in school by 6pm, just before  the deadline which saved them from possibly getting expelled. Occasionally the older boys manage to sneak out to the local pub and get themselves half a pint of beer, but it was limited to one half pint!

Perhaps more extraordinary was that Tony with a small group of friends started up a strictly secret shooting club. He had brought his own shotgun from home and the boys went out to shoot rabbits. The local farmers were appreciative of their efforts, especially as they were given the rabbits to eat. A close shave occurred one day when  Tony unexpectedly bumped into the  headmaster just as he was crossing the quadrangle on his way to go hunting. His gun was carefully concealed under his clothes - the barrel in his trouser leg and the stock under his jacket - but he managed to continue on his way after a brief chat without arousing the headmaster’s suspicions.

Whilst in Lampeter Tony said that the boys kept up with war news over the radio but in their daily lives they felt largely undisturbed by the war. He commented that Lampeter seemed not to know there was a war on. An example of this was that items were on sale in the stores in the town that were not readily available elsewhere, such as salad cream and tinned tomato sauce. His mother would sometimes ask him to bring some items home with him which he could get in Lampeter but which she could not obtain in South Wales.

Tony left Lampeter in March 1942 and went straight into the Navy. At that time, service recruiters  travelled round  public schools to encourage boys to enlist. By April 1942, a month after leaving school, Tony was in the Navy - something that he had always wanted to do - and sent to a training school in Plymouth. Three months later he was on an E class destroyer called HMS Escapade beginning what was to be a long and distinguished career in the Royal Navy both during the war and for many years afterwards. Of particular note was Tony’s service on HMS Clematis, a flower class corvette on D Day and on a Landing Ship Tank in the Far East after the surrender of Germany in 1945.


Tony and his sister, Joan


Blog by Frances Foley, based on telephone interviews held with Tony during February 2021

Photographs reproduced from the Freshwater East Volunteer Group News magazine, March 2021


Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Aberystwyth Prepares for the Arrival of Evacuees 1939

In 1939 the Government Evacuation Scheme listed places in England and Wales that were designated as evacuation areas from which young children and vulnerable people were to be moved to safer locations. Cardiganshire was one of ten evacuation reception areas nominated in Wales.

The Ministry of Health Memo in 1939 identified the people who should be evacuated:

*   Children of school age in organised groups accompanied by their teachers
*    Pre-school children with mothers
*    Expectant mothers
*    Blind and cripple population so far as removal be feasible

https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/homefront/evacuation/pdf/britain.pdf

Aberystwyth Borough Council Minutes of 1939 give a picture of when information was received in Aberystwyth and the actions taken. One of the early steps undertaken in January 1939 was an assessment of the accommodation available in the town.

 

https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/homefront/evacuation/pdf/britain.pdf

A letter dated 1st April 1939 from the Ministry of Health informed the Council that Aberystwyth was to be a reception area for Liverpool and that the first group who would be evacuated would be unaccompanied children in school units - but no more than the number for whom voluntary offers of accommodation had already been received.  The Ministry decided that 4,000 persons could be accommodated in the town and the Council  had the responsibility to make detailed plans for their reception, consulting with transport authorities and the evacuating area.

A few days later on April 5, the Council set up an Evacuation Sub Committee made up of representatives of the YMCA, the WVS, elementary schools, the British Legion, Urdd Gobaith Cymru and a representative of each church and chapel in the town.

In May,at a conference of local authorities in Cardiganshire it was initially stated that the county as a whole would be expected to receive 14,200 persons under the Evacuation Scheme but at this point in time  the estimate was for 3,190 evacuees to come to  Aberystwyth, 2,360 to Aberystwyth Rural District and none to the other boroughs and districts in the county. The Aberystwyth allocation  of 3,190 was made up as follows:

Elementary school children   1450
Teachers and helpers   140
Pre school children and mothers/guardians   1440
Expectant mothers   120
Adult blind persons   40  

They would arrive in four train loads of 800 persons each,  two trains arriving on each of the first two days of evacuation.  Householders who had volunteered to take children were sent letters of thanks from the Ministry of Health and the Mayor. They were also given a card to display in the window to show that they  had volunteered to take on this form of National Service. These probably reflected the sentiments shown in the poster below.

 

https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-evacuated-children-of-the-second-world-war

 

In June 1939, the Council received news that the University College of Wales was expecting to receive 250 students from London and 250 from Liverpool. It was hoped that the students would be able to make use of houses on the College’s list of approved lodgings. Because of these extra numbers the Town Clerk requested a reduction by one train load of evacuee children  to be received in Aberystwyth because it was felt that an unfair burden had been placed on the town compared with the rest of the county. There were also fears that the schools would be unable to cope and that the town’s water supply might prove inadequate.

By July 1939 arrangements had been made for a Medical Officer of Health and first aid staff to be in attendance at Alexandra Road Schools when the children arrived.  Each church and chapel would appoint an Assistant  Billeting Officer who would collect their group of children from Alexandra Road School, take them to be fed and then show them to their billets. The formal order to evacuate children was given on 31 August 1939, three days before war broke out. The photograph below shows evacuees leaving Liverpool  for Aberystwyth in September 1939


https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/nostalgia/gallery/second-world-war-local-evacuees-10512910

 

The WVS and local places of worship played a key role in receiving the children. However there were serious concerns  about some children’s health. On 4th September 1939, the Council received a letter which asked,  “owing to the verminous character of a large percentage of the evacuees received into the town”  what steps would  be taken to cleanse them? The Council decided that nurses would carry out initial checks referring children on to doctors when necessary. The Ministry of Health had stated that evacuees would be given medical attention free of charge.

By October 1939, the  Chief Billeting Officer reported that the following evacuees had arrived in Aberystwyth:

971 unaccompanied children
53 Helpers
41 teachers
231 mothers with 351 children of pre- school age.


Evacuees Arriving at Aberystwyth on their way to Alexandra School, photo NLW/LLGC

Before long plans were made for play areas in the town for the children, for example at Plascrug. On 7th October, an entertainment for evacuees was held at King’s Hall arranged by the High Sheriff of the county. That same month the Council appealed to Liverpool authorities for extra clothing for evacuees and requested  a female doctor and health visitors

On December 17th, the Director of Education of Liverpool visited Aberystwyth to check on how the children were faring. Meanwhile a Christmas party was arranged for the evacuees at the Kings Hall  which was largely organised by the WVS, with funding towards it requested from Liverpool.

A bright spot at the  end of the year was the decision to  open The King’s Hall cafe on a Sunday to allow parents from Liverpool to come and meet their children and have meals at cost price.  Once again the WVS were key in providing this opportunity and their frequent appeals for volunteers throughout the land hints at both their industry and organization and also the need of as many hands as possible to do this vital work. 

 

https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/17603

 

Blog by Frances Foley

Sources:  

Borough of Aberystwyth  Minutes and Agenda 1939, Ceredigion Archives

The Liverpool Echo

https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-evacuated-children-of-the-second-world-war

https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/homefront/evacuation/pdf/britain.pdf

Thursday, April 15, 2021

Return of Japanese POW's to Aberystwyth

My Great Grandfather, Capt. R G (Dick) Read, spent most of World War II as a prisoner of the Japanese in Singapore, mainly in the infamous Changi POW camp.  From an early stage, he quickly began to suffer due to the poor diet given to the prisoners, the harsh treatment they received and from some of the debilitating diseases that many prisoners succumbed to. Dysentry, beri beri, typhoid and many other tropical illnesses were common, and deadly, in the camps. Captain Read suffered from regular bouts of dysentery, ulcers, beri beri and dyspepsia during his time in Changi, being hospitalised regularly.

At the end of the war, many of the POWs that were to weak or ill to be shipped home in the first weeks were sent on hospital ships to other safe areas to recover, gain strength and put on weight safely. Many of the sick were kept at Changi POW camp weeks after the more able prisoners had gone. My Great Grandfather was finally shipped out in mid September on a hospital ship, the SS Rajula, leaving Keppel Harbour bound for Madras.  


Telegram from Captain Read to his wife from Madras, 1945
 

My Great Grandfather's medical card was issued to him after his arrival in a hospital in Madras to recuperate before the long voyage home.


Captain Read's medical card



It was on this ship that my Great Grandfather found out the the ship's MO (Medical Officer) was a doctor from his home town of Aberystwyth, as he noted in his diary: ‘Our M.O. I have just heard is doctor (Hay) Cribb from Aberystwyth, what a shock!. . . Met Cribb at breakfast and chatted for an hour, he left Aber in June or July. Told of a few casualties etc…I had forgotten his partner, Owen Lloyd.’

Capt. R G Read departed Madras on the SS Llandovery Castle, bound for Southampton,  then home to Aberystwyth. Though he received a hero's welcome off the train in Aberystwyth, he sadly died within a year of his return, aged 46, in September 1946 of stomach cancer. He spent a total 32 years in service and is commemorated on Llanbadarn Fawr War Memorial.

 

Telegram sent on Capt Read's arrival in Britain, 1945


Blog by Simon Burgess 

Author's website : https://www.richardgeorgeread.com/


 

Thursday, March 25, 2021

The Women's Land Army in WWII - Part Three

Josie Rowland-Jones (nee McKenna) met her husband during the war and was married in 1949.  She found it hard to settle despite the friendly people around her.  Her husband worked the land - erecting and repairing fences during the war, and most certainly would not have been happy moving to Liverpool to be near to Josie’s family.  After the war he worked on construction projects – locally at Nant y Moch, sea defences at Tywyn and Borth before moving on to become a porter/security officer in the National Library of Wales until his retirement twenty five years later. Josie worked in catering at the University whilst raising three children and caring for her in-laws until their deaths in the 1960’s. Her daughter Liz remembers growing up in Aberystwyth, where she attended St. Padarn’s Convent school, and of visiting the town with her mum.  There seems to have been a very special bond between Josie and any former Land Army companions that she met.  Happy days remembered it seems!  

 

Olwen and her colleagues enjoying a break

 

Olwen Jones also met her husband during the war. He was from Penrhyncoch and had a farming background, having a small-holding with sheep, and was also in the Home Guard.  He eventually became a porter in the University.  The numerous pictures we have of Olwen’s Land Army Days were only found after the deaths of Olwen and her husband. Apparently Olwen didn’t talk about her work during the war, but did talk a great deal about the friends she had made.  One of these friends eventually made her wedding cake.  Olwen had been a driver during the war, alongside her work on the land, and eventually became a housewife and ambulance driver in later civilian life.  Olwen was in the Land Army from July 1942 to October 1950.

 

Olwen and her delivery truck
 

After the war the hostel in Bow Street was used for civilian housing whilst the new housing estates were being built.  Liz remembers driving past it with her Mum whilst still a child and being told that her Mum had lived there  during the war.  Liz explained that she thought it looked a bleak and unwelcoming place to spend time or live in! 

 

Rita, Nancy and Lilian outside the hostel

 

The lessons we can take from the experiences of the Land Army girls seems to be we that we should make the most of what we have.  The girls had very little in the way of home comforts, entertainment, or leisure time but yet most seemed to have happy memories of those times.  They were “doing their bit” to help the war effort, and mostly seemed proud to be engaged in it. The girls seemed to have made their own fun from whatever they could obtain. 

 

Tea time!


One of the legacies of the Land Army also seems to be that Lady Denman, a strong feminist, brought attention to the fact that Land Army girls had worked tremendously hard during the war and their efforts should have been treated as all other services.  In 1945, Lady Denman wrote to the Minister of Agriculture, R.S Hudson, resigning her position as Honorary Director of the Women’s Land Army in protest at the decision to exclude members of the WLA from Government capital grants to assist in restarting business enterprises.  Women’s roles must have come into question after the war possibly leading to the swinging '60’s and beyond.

 


Olwen's discharge certificate and letter

 



I would like to thank Liz and Brian Ashton and Meinir Davies for agreeing to talk to me via Zoom and to Kate Sullivan for sending me the video of this meeting. 

Thanks to Steven Evans and Meinir Davies for all the superb pictures and to Brian Ashton for scanning them all for me to use in my research.

Blog by Kath Phillips





Friday, March 12, 2021

The Women's Land Army in WWII - Part Two

In 1940 Young women were recruited from across England and Wales to help with the war effort.  They were given choices of occupation such as munitions, office work, meteorology, nursing or working the land. For many working the land seemed to be the best option – indeed it was a chance for new experiences away from home, and so the Land Army flourished once again.

 

Women's Land Army at Birchgrove, Aberystwyth

Training for the work was minimal (between four and six weeks) and so girls had basically to learn ‘on the job’, which must have seemed overwhelming for some, like those recruited from cities such as Liverpool and Birmingham and who had no farm experience at all. For the farms around Aberystwyth, the YWCA Hostel in Bow Street was taken over as a Hostel for the Land Army recruits who were then ferried out to do their farm work.
 

Harvesting by hand


The girls based at  Bow Street looked after animals, ploughed the fields, dug up potatoes, harvested the crops, killed the rats, dug and hoed for 48 hours a week in winter and 50 in the summer. As there was not enough machinery to go round, they often had to work with old fashioned equipment such as horse drawn hand ploughs and to harvest crops by hand. Olwen Jones, who we met in last week's blog, also drove the truck to deliver or collect goods where needed. Generally farmers were kind to the girls, though some were doubtless far more generous than others.   

 

Using the threshing machine

Mary Bott was a Welsh Land Girl who said she had “never worked so hard in all my life” She also told of her fingers being marked and cut and long hours of work from 5.30 a.m. until 7.00p.m.  Mary had porridge to start the day for whilst the farmer had a full cooked breakfast. However the girls from the Bow Street Hostel do seem to have been welcomed and there certainly seems to have been fantastic camaraderie amongst them.*

 

Olwen and two companions shovelling snow at the hostel

 

Digging potatoes, Jean Roache third left


The girls worked the land at Penparcau, Crosswood, Birchgrove, Trawscoed, Tynclawdd and Nanteos. Nanteos seems to have been a ‘hub’ for the Land Army girls: 

'Before the war , an underground boiler heated all the greenhouse which grew peaches, figs, artichokes and asparagus, as well as all the other usual vegetables. At the outbreak of the Second World War, with the help of the Land Army Girls, two front fields of Nanteos were turned into crop fields of cabbage, cauliflowers, Brussel sprouts, lettuces, and potatoes. One year during the war, the whole country suffered with a plague of caterpillars destroying all crops. Mr Newman (a gardener at Nanteos) came up with a solution - sheep dip - which cleared all the caterpillars. He sold onions under the clock tower at Aberystwyth and made £100 in one day. He also sold to many other needy places as far as Birmingham.' **


Olwen and other land girls pulling linseed at Nanteos, 1942
 

At the time of the Second World War, the owner of Nanteos was Margaret Powell. Her only son and heir William, was killed in action in Buvignies, France on 6 November 1918, five days before the armistice ended WWI, aged just 19yrs.  Margaret’s husband Edward died in 1930 so Margaret was left with the task of managing the estate. She seems to have been a remarkable woman – well known around Aberystwyth and certainly very welcoming of the Land Army to her lands to help the war effort for herself and staff as well as further afield. 

 

Margaret Powell and Land Army girls  Gay, Lilian, Naomi, Mary, Nancy and Olwen Jones (Back right)

Blog by Kath Phillips

Photographs by kind permission of Liz Ashton, Meinir Jones Davies and Steven Evans.

* From: WWVA interview with Mary Bott (www.faceoook.com/bbcradiowales/videos/318567829405359/) See also https://westwalesveteransarchive.com/mary-bott/

** From Janet Joel’s book ‘Nanteos’ (1996)


Wednesday, March 3, 2021

The Women's Land Army in WWII - Part One

The Women’s Land Army (WLA) was first established in January 1917 by Lady Denman to help increase the amount of food grown in Britain; it was wound up in 1919. In 1938 Lady Denman was approached by the Ministry of Agriculture to re-form the Land Army and so it was re-established just before the start of WWII in 1939. Lady Denman had also helped to found the W.I. and had encouraged rural women to become involved in their local community by growing and preserving food. She encouraged WIs to support the WLA and said “The prejudice against a woman attempting to do a man’s work dies hard”.  

 

Lady Denman from womenslandarmy.co.uk

She also said “The Land Army fights in the fields. It is in the fields of Britain that the most critical battle of the present war may well be fought and won”. At its peak in 1943 over 80,000 women worked as ‘Land Girls’, coming from a wide range of backgrounds including towns and cities as well as the countryside.

 

 

Lady Denman was instrumental in ensuring that the Land Army uniform was practical and would make the women feel proud to wear it as they worked the land for their country.

 

Images from womenslandarmy.co.uk

 

I recently held a Zoom meeting with the daughters of two Land Army Girls, based in Bow Street just north of Aberystywth. They were very happy to share as much information as they could but both regretted not having asked more questions whilst their mothers were still alive.  Their mums' names are Mary Josephine McKenna, (1925-1995) known as Josie (Married David Rowland Jones and mother to Liz Ashton)  and Elizabeth Olwen Jones, (1922-1986) known as Olwen (Married Olwen Jones and mother to Meinir Jones Davies).

 

Josie (second left) and Olwen (fourth left)

 

Liz said that her mum Josie was brought up in Liverpool in quite a large family having two sisters and a brother, but was not very 'street wise' at the age of about 18.  Before the war, Josie had worked at Jacobs biscuit factory in Liverpool, she had spent some time in service and briefly a foot messenger during the raids in Liverpool. She and her family thought that she would be happier working on the land in Wales as her way of serving her country proudly. 

Liz thought her mother would have been very happy with the uniform, as it was very practical and during the war none of the girls would have had much of a wardrobe. Liz also said that coming to join the Land Army was probably an eye opener for her mum, Josie. Meinir said that her mum, Olwen, was from Llanilar, close to Aberystwyth, but she chose to stay in the Bow Street hostel. She was very enthusiastic about serving as a Land Army Girl. 

 

Women's Land Army Hostel at Bow Street, Aberystwyth 

Speaking about conditions in the hostel, Meinir and Liz thought that after a long hard day on a farm the women would be looking forward to a hot bath.   However, this didn’t always happen, though a hot meal would have been provided (I think the hostel caretakers cooked – possibly featured in the last picture below, without uniform).  The hostel looks cold but there would have been stories of their day to report and the camaraderie between the girls must have been helpful.  Their hours of work were so long that socialising outside of the hostel was a special event.

 

Another view of the Bow Street Hostel
 

For entertainment, Liz told us the story of her dad who lived in Bont Goch would think nothing of cycling to Bow Street Hostel meet Josie, take a bus or train into Aberystwyth to see a film and visit the Mayflower Café, and of course the reverse trip back afterwards. They also visited the Black Lion in Bow Street.

 

Outside the Bow St Hostel. Note the YWCA plaque, ie, the Women’s Land Army plaque

 

Blog by Kath Phillips

Photographs by kind permission of Liz Ashton and Meinir Jones Davies 

Sources:  

nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides-womens-land-army

womenslandarmy.co.uk


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