Evacuees, September 1939
An air-raid shelter for us in Cables Wynd was provided in the cellars of a tenement in Sheriff Brae near St Thomas's. We used this on the occasion of the German raids on Clydebank. It was an exciting time for a boy of six years.
Despite the rude awakenings of the wailing sirens, I looked forward to the community spirit pervading in the shelter. All the children had been provided with bunk beds and we would lie awake listening to the good-natured banter of the adults. Everybody's spirits were kept up with the cheery sing-a-longs during the long nights.
One particular evening, land mines fell near the Leith Town Hall causing severe damage in the vicinity and several deaths.
My aunty Peggy had been suffering from a poisoned hand and could not bear the pain much longer. The local air-raid warden was doing his round of the shelters at the time when he arrived at ours.
On hearing of her discomfort, he offered to accompany her across the road to Leith Hospital. Despite the emergency prevailing, the hospital staff treated her immediately.
The air raid warnings continued for a time after this, but no further damage was inflicted upon Leith. My grandma became philosophical about leaving her house for the shelter. 'If I am to be killed then I would rather die in my bed' she declared.
David Kilpatricks School. Bomb damage 1941
Weighing over 20 stones and very rarely leaving her house at other times, maybe this influenced her decision. Anyhow, she survived the war.
John Stewart, 2001
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