Oswald Ensor, interviewed in 1977
I think, when we came to V.J. and V.E. Day and situations like this, people
rallied round, and I well remember a stage being set up, children being done up
as minstrels and everyone dressing up. We had races up and down the road, and
marches round, going down Florence Road, Cottesbrook Road in turn, paying our
respects to our neighbours as one might say, but it was a situation that went on
well into the night, and everyone had a cracking good time.
Mrs Robbins, of Hazelwood Road, interviewed in 1977
I think the (sense of brotherhood) broke up again. I think so. Everyone went
back to living their own lives...it lasted a bit, you know, the great joy of the
war being over, and everybody was happy, and everybody was friendly...but the
aftermath, I think...I mean things were still hard for us, and the community
spirit died I think to some extent.
Tom Morris, of Westley Road, interviewed in 1977
The relief was indescribable, because you realised you weren't going to spend
another night sitting down, completely impotent, hearing them going over. That
was the thing that got you. You couldn't do anything. You were sitting there
waiting for the noise and they say that if you could hear it you was all right,
it didn't hit you. if it was yours you never heard it at all.

VJ Day celebrations, Dryden Grove (thanks to Les Smith for
this postcard)

A party at Pool Farm Road (from
The War Years, used with permission)

Thanks to Alan Taylor and Harry Murch for the names. You can
click on the image for a larger version.
Frank Taylor Lockwood's diary
contains references to the street parties for VE and VJ Days near to his home.
Schoolchildren received a letter from the King.

In Birmingham as a whole 77 air raids killed 2,241
citizens and injured 6,692. 140,336 homes were damaged, 12,125 badly, and
about 4,000 completely destroyed. 4,003 business premises, 2,365 factories
and workshops were damaged. On 19th/20th November 23 districts of the city
were hit with 646 HE bombs. On 11th/12th December 1940 the raid lasted 13
and a half hours. Total war affected family life very badly. There were
shortages of food and clothing, there was the worry and fear of husbands,
brothers and sons being killed fighting, and many were bereaved. There was
the terror and lack of sleep caused by the air raids, and the damage to
homes, shops, streets, water, gas and electricity services, and workplaces.
Women had to keep the family together and also had to work on the land or in
factories, and take part in dangerous anti-aircraft or firewatching duties.
In many cases they did not have their children at home for several years if
they had been evacuated. However, women had more money because of their
jobs, and many did enjoy a good social life, with cinemas, theatres and
dance halls open. Libraries and the radio were very popular. At the end of
the war, the family had to get used to living with their fathers and sons
again, who had spent years witnessing injury and death, avoiding death and
killing enemy soldiers. These experiences upset many men very deeply, and
changed them. Furthermore, their wives had enjoyed some freedoms during the
war, despite everything, and had to get used to doing as their husband told
them again. |