
Churchill's Children
The Evacuee Experience in Wartime Britain
John Welshman(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 25. March 2010
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-0-19-957441-4 (ISBN)
Description
'We were dumped at a roundabout with our labels on. People pulled and tugged at the children they wanted. It was a bit like a cattle market... people just waded in. I went with a lady and her daughter - she was like a second Mum.'
Alexander King, evacuated aged eleven
Based on the stories of thirteen children and adults, Churchill's Children tells the often moving story of the evacuation of schoolchildren in Britain during the Second World War, from the first mass evacuations of 1939 through to the lesser-known but equally important evacuations of 1940 and 1944.
John Welshman skilfully captures the experience of evacuation - the happiness or sadness, excitement or boredom, resentment or acceptance, love or abuse that the children experienced during their time away from home. Along the way, the book addresses some of the fundamental questions raised by evacuation. How were relationships between children and parents affected by the long periods apart? What happened when brothers and sisters were separated? And how did the children feel when they went
home?
But the book looks at the adults too - at how the officials in charge of billeting and teachers got caught up in events, and at how civil servants and researchers became involved in the ensuing debates. As Welshman shows, the evacuation was to have a significant impact on shaping attitudes in the post-war world to everything from reconstruction and state intervention to poverty, social class, and the welfare state. However, the analysis aside, what this book perhaps offers above all is a highly
evocative portrait of a very different Britain, reminding us just how much has changed in the seventy years since the Second World War.
Alexander King, evacuated aged eleven
Based on the stories of thirteen children and adults, Churchill's Children tells the often moving story of the evacuation of schoolchildren in Britain during the Second World War, from the first mass evacuations of 1939 through to the lesser-known but equally important evacuations of 1940 and 1944.
John Welshman skilfully captures the experience of evacuation - the happiness or sadness, excitement or boredom, resentment or acceptance, love or abuse that the children experienced during their time away from home. Along the way, the book addresses some of the fundamental questions raised by evacuation. How were relationships between children and parents affected by the long periods apart? What happened when brothers and sisters were separated? And how did the children feel when they went
home?
But the book looks at the adults too - at how the officials in charge of billeting and teachers got caught up in events, and at how civil servants and researchers became involved in the ensuing debates. As Welshman shows, the evacuation was to have a significant impact on shaping attitudes in the post-war world to everything from reconstruction and state intervention to poverty, social class, and the welfare state. However, the analysis aside, what this book perhaps offers above all is a highly
evocative portrait of a very different Britain, reminding us just how much has changed in the seventy years since the Second World War.
Reviews / Votes
Welshman's effort to combine personal, subjective accounts of the experience of evacuation with the history of evacuation as social policy is worthy and ambitious. * Penny Summerfield, Cultural and Social History *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Illustrations
22 black and white halftones
Dimensions
Height: 204 mm
Width: 138 mm
Thickness: 33 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-957441-4 (9780199574414)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
03/2010
1st Edition
Oxford University Press
€54.43
Available for download
Person
John Welshman is the author or editor of five books on twentieth-century British social history and has held posts at the Universities of Leicester, Oxford, and York. He is currently Senior Lecturer in the Department of History at Lancaster University. He became interested in the evacuation as a postgraduate student, because the sources were so interesting and lively. He has since become an authority on evacuation, with articles in Twentieth Century British
History, the Historical Journal, and the Journal of Scottish Historical Studies.
History, the Historical Journal, and the Journal of Scottish Historical Studies.
Content
Introduction: A Child's War ; 1. 'Evacuation': Just Another Word ; 2. Operation Pied Piper ; 3. The Railway Children ; 4. Living Out of a Suitcase ; 5. The Official Response ; 6. A Winter on Welfare ; 7. City and Countryside ; 8. Spitfire Summer ; 9. Victims or Vandals? ; 10. One Year On ; 11. The Long Haul ; 12. Reconstruction ; 13. Back Home: The Return ; 14. Ordinary People in Extraordinary Circumstances ; Epilogue ; Bibliography ; Index