During WWII, the American
homefront was separated from the war front. There were no battles
fought on American soil. Not so for the British people. They did not
suffer invastion, but England was bombed on repeated occasions. The
piercing sound of air raid sirens became a daily occurrence –
sometimes multiple times a day. As a result, citizens had to
regularly protect themselves from falling debris or buildings. There
were several options available.
England's Ministry of Home
Security issued a pamphlet “Your Home as an Air Raid Shelter”
that uses over twenty pages of text, diagrams and photographs to
describe how a house could be altered to keep inhabitants safe.
Instructions covered everything from a “garden shelter” (an open
trench) to a “refuge room.” A companion piece written by the
Welfare Adviser to London, Mrs. Creswick Atkinson, was entitled
“A.R.P at Home – Hints for Housewives.” It asked questions such
as “Is your shelter clean and always ready for use?” Certainly an
area of housekeeping I had not considered!
Morrison shelters were named
after Herbert Morrison, the Minister of Home Security at the time.
Each shelter had a cage-like construction beneath it and were used
inside the house. They were approximately 6 ½ feet long, 4 feet
wide and 2 ½ feet high There was a solid 1/8 in steel plate “table”
top, welded wire mesh sides, and a metal lath “mattress”- type
floor. Altogether it had 359 parts and had 3 tools supplied with the
pack with which to assemble it. (Not a good choice if you weren't
mechanically inclined, or if you were in the least bit
claustrophobic!)
Something to think about.
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