Where Did Cardiff Evacuees Go?

Many of them went to the rural parts of south and north Wales. The traumatic effect of such uprooting on these young evacuees, being suddenly snatched away from family and loved ones, from everything that was familiar and known, can only be imagined.

Did evacuees go to Wales?

Trains, buses, cars and boats were used to move children, and during the first weekend of September 1939 evacuees arrived in Wales in their thousands.

Which places in the UK received evacuees?

The country was split into three types of areas: Evacuation, Neutral and Reception, with the first Evacuation areas including places like Greater London, Birmingham and Glasgow, and Reception areas being rural such as Kent, East Anglia and Wales. Neutral areas were places that would neither send nor receive evacuees.

What happened to Cardiff during the Blitz?

The Cardiff Blitz
One of the most devastating raids on Cardiff took place on 2 January 1941. At least 126 people died and 110 homes were destroyed (plus more homes were damaged). This list shows the streets and public buildings that were damaged during this raid.

Why was Cardiff targeted in ww2?

Cardiff Docks became a strategic bombing target for German Luftwaffe (the Nazi German air force) as it was one of the biggest coal ports in the world. Consequently, it and the surrounding area were heavily bombed.

Where in Wales did evacuees go?

Over the following week almost two million people, most of them children, were sent away from their families in the industrial cities of the south east and the Midlands into the countryside of the west. Many of them went to the rural parts of south and north Wales.

Which parts of Wales took in evacuees?

Glamorgan received the largest share – some 33,000 children – but there were few villages in rural Wales that didn’t welcome evacuees. Welsh homes were not always pleased with their new charges. There were fears of germs, lice and disease being brought into the Welsh countryside from English slums.

Is there a list of evacuees?

Individual records will only be open if the person is now deceased, but if the evacuee is still alive they can request a transcript of their own record. See our research guide on the 1939 Register for more information. There are no lists or registers of evacuees available online.

Where did the British children go during ww2?

Called Operation Pied Piper, millions of people, most of them children, were shipped to rural areas in Britain as well as overseas to Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States.

Did people in evacuees get paid?

Hosts received money for each evacuee they took in. They were paid by taking a form to the local post office. Billeting was compulsory. People who refused to take evacuees into their homes without a good reason could be taken to court and fined.

Did Cardiff fans swim away?

In September 1988, after seeing their side win in Swansea, a group of around 30 Cardiff fans were chased into the sea near Swansea Civic Centre by a group of around 50 Swansea fans. Since then, Swansea fans have adopted a “swim away” gesture, in reference to the event.

What was Slug and Lettuce called before in Cardiff?

It’s signed off by Slug and Lettuce and also says the new-look venue will open on Friday, February 15. Missoula’s branding has also been changed to Slug and Lettuce on social media.

When did Somalis come to Cardiff?

19th century
The Somali community in Cardiff has the largest British-born Somali population in the UK. They were originally drawn to Cardiff as seamen at the end of the 19th century, shortly after the opening of the Suez canal, to work in the thriving docks.

Will Cardiff get bombed?

It’s a highly unlikely scenario, of course. However, 60 years ago, crisis planners were desperately worried about the threat of a nuclear attack and identified key cities and towns in the UK which were a likely target to be wiped out with one nuclear bomb.

What was the most bombed English city in ww2?

While London was bombed more heavily and more often than anywhere else in Britain, the Blitz was an attack on the whole country. Very few areas were left untouched by air raids.

Which Welsh town was used in World War Z?

Filming locations included Blaenau Ffestiniog in Wales, Fort St. Elmo in Malta, Cochrane Street in Glasgow, and Discovery Park in Kent. Lulworth Cove.

Where did the evacuees stay?

Where were they evacuated to? To smaller towns and villages in the countryside. Some children were sent to stay with relatives outside in the countryside, but others were sent to live with complete strangers. Billeting officers were responsible for helping to find homes for the evacuees.

Where was the safest place in ww2 in the UK?

One safe place was Oswestry, a small town in Shropshire near the border with Wales. People in the town provided billets (homes) for evacuees (people evacuated) from Birkenhead, part of the city of Liverpool on the north-west coast.

Did evacuees return home?

Many evacuees’ had returned home long before March 1946. In April 1945, the Government began to make travel arrangements to return the evacuees to their homes when the war was over. By 12th July 1945, more than 100 trains had brought 54,317 evacuees home to London.

What parts of Wales were bombed in ww2?

Wales’s Blitz
In Wales, Cardiff and Swansea were subject to the most sustained attacks. In Cardiff over the course of the war 33,000 houses were damaged, over 500 demolished and 355 civilians killed.

What happened in Wales in 1961?

Events. 16 February – The BP Explorer, a loaded tanker barge bound for Sharpness from Swansea, turns over in the Severn Estuary. 17 February – The BP Explorer is seen bouncing upside down through the recently wrecked (October 26, 1960) Severn Railway Bridge. Her crew of five men are killed.