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Carrie’s War

Many large towns and cities in Britain were bombed during the Second World War (1939 – 1945). In an effort to keep them safe, many children from towns and cities were sent to live in the country, usually staying with families. This was called being evacuated, and the children were known as evacuees.

In Carrie’s War by Nina Bawden, Carrie and her brother Nicholas are evacuated from London to Wales. In this extract, they have just boarded the train and it is pulling out of the station, leaving their mother on the platform.

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Sheep and mountains. “Oh, it’ll be such fun,” their mother had said when she kissed them goodbye at the station. “Living in the country instead of the stuffy old city. You’ll love it, you see if you don’t!” As if Hitler had arranged this old war for their own good, just so that Carrie and Nick could be sent away in a train with gas masks slung over their shoulders and their names on cards round their necks. Labelled like packages – Caroline Wendy Willow and Nicholas Peter Willow – only with no address to be sent to. None of them, not even their teachers, knew where they were going.

“That’s part of the adventure,” Carrie’s mother had said, and not just to cheer them up: it was her nature to look on the bright side. If she found herself lost in the jungle, she’d just say, “Well, at least we’ll be warm.”

Thinking of her mother always making the best of things (or at least pretending to; when the train began to move, mother stopped smiling) Carrie nearly did cry. There was a lump like a pill stuck in her throat. She swallowed hard and put on a serious face.




Answer number 1. What does the word evacuate mean as it is used in the passage?

Answer number 2. Which of the following words BEST describes Carrie's mother?

Last question, number 3. What kind of figurative language is used in the following sentence?"There was a lump like a pill stuck in her throat. "

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The evacuation of civilians in Britain during the Second World War was designed to protect people, especially children, from the risks associated with aerial bombing of cities by moving them to areas thought to be less at risk.

Operation Pied Piper, which began on 1 September 1939, officially relocated 1.5 million people. There were further waves of official evacuation and re-evacuation from the south and east coasts in June 1940, when a seaborne invasion was expected, and from affected cities after the Blitz began in September 1940. There were also official evacuations from the UK to other parts of the British Empire, and many non-official evacuations within and from the UK. Other mass movements of civilians included British citizens arriving from the Channel Islands, and displaced people arriving from continental Europe.

Child evacuees from Bristol arriving at Brent in Devon in 1940

The Government Evacuation Scheme was developed during summer 1938 by the Anderson Committee and implemented by the Ministry of Health. The country was divided into zones, classified as either "evacuation", "neutral", or "reception", with priority evacuees being moved from the major urban centres and billeted on the available private housing in more rural areas. Each zone covered roughly a third of the population, although several urban areas later bombed had not been classified for evacuation.

In early 1939, the reception areas compiled lists of available housing. Space was found for about 2,000 people, and the government also constructed camps which provided a few thousand additional spaces.

The government began to publicise its plan through the local authorities in summer 1939. The government had overestimated demand: only half of all school-aged children were moved from the urban areas instead of the expected 80%. There was enormous regional variation: as few as 15% of the children were evacuated from some urban areas, while over 60% of children were evacuated from Manchester, Belfast and Liverpool. The refusal of the central government to spend large sums on preparation also reduced the effectiveness of the plan. In the event, over 3,000,000 people were evacuated.

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