This is the first of a series of four articles where my uncle, the late Mr Gordon Bessant is talking to Mr Joe Hieatt-Smith about life during the war years. They taped these recollections in 1996.
What did you do during the war Gordon?
From the time I was 14 to the time I was 19 I worked mostly on armaments, the Spitfire, Bristol Bombers - the engines and fuselage components for the Spitfire and the Western Lysander. At the very beginning of the war itself - it was on a Sunday morning the 3rd of September 1939.
I was at Testwood Church, because I sang in the choir. Everybody in the church as they came in were all saying "Do you think there'll be a war?" Of course I was only fourteen years of age and I'd just finished school. There was none of this going on to extended school like there is today. It was basically compulsory that you left school at 14. I'd left school in the August, 1939.
It was our summer holidays and my father was negotiating with a company that was working for the repairs and maintenance at the Sunderland flying boats (and the flying boats flew into Southampton Water). They were docked and stationed at Hythe on the west bank of the river Test opposite Southampton docks itself. There's a company there that was manufacturing exhaust equipment and all manner of ancillary equipment for the flying boats.
Anyway I got a job with them as an apprentice in sheet metal working and general engineering. I was 14 and my rate of pay was 10 shillings a week. (That's 50 pence in modern money, less than a dollar, a week!) Out of that we paid fourpence for our stamps for National Health and Unemployment. We had the princely sum of nine and eight a week for the first 12 months. At that time there wasn't an awful lot of work in the area, not for children, boys, of 14, so you more of less got a job where you could. Much the same as it is today really. Only because of the war you went into production mode and everybody was working for peace and the defence of the country so you really got a job whether it was an apprenticeship or not. I was fortunate my father had been negotiating with the employment of myself in the industry and of course I naturally got a job.
How did life change when the war started?
The first thing was everybody was telling everybody it would all be over by Christmas, that was in September, we got the idea it wouldn't last long. My father who had been in the Royal Navy in the first world war, he wasn't fooled too easily by others, and he said it would take them some time to even catch up with what the Germans had developed in armaments and war material. Of course the Germans had tried out all their weapons - you've probably heard of the Spanish civil war they had in 1937,38 when the Germans had a fighter bomber called the Stuka. They tested that on the Spanish in Spain during the civil war, and other armaments they had developed, so they knew that they operated much more efficiently than our own.
We were still relying on the Enfield rifle that was built and designed way back before the first world war in 1910,1911 and the Germans were using more sophisticated equipment. What else did they have? They had a very good size of navy and exceptionally well developed air force - so the Spitfire, R H Mitchell I think it was, the designer of the Spitfire and he had designed it more or less as an aircraft for winning the Schneider trophy (which is the air speed record). It was flown from Calshot round the Isle of Wight and the Schneider trophy was won by the SR6 which was based in Southampton (at the aviation museum, have you seen it?). That was the aircraft before the war which they developed basically the Spitfire from, with a Rolls Royce Merlin engine.
Lots of things changed then. The towns had to be blacked out at night because of showing up any industry. The German bombers would come over so there had to be no lights showing. We had to black out in the evening. Everything had to be on a war footing. There had to be very little light showing on cars. There was a clamp down on petrol, and food rationing started, because most of our food, as you well know, is imported. We are not sufficiently big enough to support ourselves. Lots of areas in the New Forest around here were ploughed up and put to corn and wheat and maize and potatoes.
The ground in the New Forest needed more nutrients and more fertilizer because it was very poor ground. The crops did not prove very successful. There are places in the New Forest now even here around Sway, where the ground was ploughed up. It was planted with mostly potato crops. You know where, along Slade Bottom, Horseshoe Common, by the Marlpit crossroads, you know there's open stretches of land there where the cattle now graze, there's hardly any fern or any gorse bushes, they are all cleared out. It was all ploughed up during the war and planted with crops, but it was a token effort because the ground didn't produce very good crops at all so they left it and after that they decided they'd only plough it and plant a potato crop, a root crop, because the ground was a bit sour, had too much acid I think.
Having said that, the food rationing was felt really badly in 1941,42,and 43 because the Germans had tremendous strength in their submarines (U-Boats as they called them) and our shipping coming across from America and Canada, Australia, and South Africa, when our boats were coming in, they would follow the convoys.
The boats would be in convoys because convoys could be protected by the Royal Navy and part of our Air Force, but they could only be protected for so many miles out and it's the areas where they couldn't be protected where they were most vulnerable, so the food had to go on rationing because of the supply.
I didn't realise till after the war that Germany had the same trouble. They were in a worse position than we were, but because their propaganda was so good we believed that they were really living in the lap of luxury and it was only Britain that was suffering. It wasn't so. The continent was very short of food too. They used lots and lots of alternatives, they even made coffee from acorns. They ground acorns to make a drink, but we didn't have to go that far.
We did have with the aid of the Americans, powdered eggs, and spam which is a well known meat compound put in tins and sent across to us. There were lots and lots of other food supplies coming in which was all a new type of thing to us . We had "K Rations" they called it, which was an American way of sending out a complete meal in a box.
Something similar to the rations you get on an aircraft when you fly on holiday - they put it on your lap in front of you. It's a made up meal which is supposed to contain enough proteins and sugar, all that you require all in one package. But with the British, whilst the Americans had a lot of tinned food we still had the old corned beef as we call it, with bread which was quite good really considering the problems we had getting flour.
The second article in this series is entitled "War Time Britain & Things Look Bleak". Look out for it if you are interested in the events of the 1940's.
Copyright David Carter 2005, reproduced with permission.
In between writing David Carter runs a holiday cottage website http://www.pebblebeachmedia.co.uk where you can browse through over 7,000 holiday cottages, villas and apartments worldwide. His latest book is SPLAM. Successful Property Letting And Management, 240 plus pages and you can find more details of that at http://www.splam.co.uk. You can contact David on any matter at supalife@aol.com
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
You say, you want to help the Palestinians, but most... Read More
When this president's father was in the Oval Office, he... Read More
I have to be honest. It is time to come... Read More
Today we have a new franchise report from the Federal... Read More
The predominant discussion in the Indianapolis media over the proposed... Read More
Former Senator, Daniel Moynihan, accurately summed up the situation when... Read More
Expected new applications for Mexican trucks to enter the US... Read More
A coffee shop conversation about a Great Country in Historic... Read More
From the comfort of their plush offices and five to... Read More
Most citizens agree that we need the Federal Trade Commission... Read More
The idea is to have all the important items with... Read More
Clint Eastwood recently plunged into the murky political pond with... Read More
The great people of the United States of America deserve... Read More
The United States and other first world nations have been... Read More
(1) Each person is to have an equal right to... Read More
Rufus King: (Said to be the fifth most important person... Read More
Businesses advertising alcohol either in TV or non-broadcast format need... Read More
Just because we have been leading the World in innovation... Read More
Their arrival portends rising local prices and a culture shock.... Read More
"When you are right you cannot be too radical; when... Read More
The news media will regularly present views from Democratic (liberal),... Read More
Recently a friend insisted that I read a book by... Read More
In his bid for the presidency, John Kerry pronounced a... Read More
In the event of that a threatening nation to the... Read More
President George W. Bush has unofficially won his re-election bid... Read More
Many of those who wish to fight for our country... Read More
The Justice Department is at it again; promoting themselves in... Read More
Fifteen hours is a tremendous barrier. It is the obstacle... Read More
Will a bus running across the borders bring cordial relations... Read More
IntroductionThe way one lyrist has written, "Hum logo ko samajh... Read More
Well many have complained that the FBI and CIA dropped... Read More
Nothing could be more alarming for Americans than what I... Read More
The Right's defense of John Thune in the Dan Nelson/MetaBank... Read More
Is Ohio Manufacturing Sector really unable to compete in the... Read More
You have in front of you two buttons, one is... Read More
All to often law makers and regulators create rules and... Read More
I would like to discuss the blocked persons list of... Read More
If a farmer plants the same crop three seasons in... Read More
Americans pride themselves on being the best, that's a fact.... Read More
They do not allow the criticism of the president in... Read More
The head of the Club of Rome has said that... Read More
"The only time I open my mouth is when I... Read More
Peace in the Middle East - whoa that is a... Read More
Are the junior attorneys in the Attorney General's office leaving... Read More
A few hours ago, Colonel Ely Ould Mohamed Vall, the... Read More
After the dance the piper must be paid. To help... Read More
Recent international wars and the often spectacular ways in which... Read More
We recently saw another ferry accident, this one in NY... Read More
Introduction:Although politicians and so-called "Intelligence Experts" are the ones appearing... Read More
You say, you want to help the Palestinians, but most... Read More
[Author's Note: Another essay that I wrote on notebook paper... Read More
United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), one of the most... Read More
The trade deficit with Canada is now 50 Billion per... Read More
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act Was created on July 30th 2002, by... Read More
The FTC franchising division purports their law enforcement experience in... Read More
Water Conservation in larger cities is less of an issue... Read More
In the previous article, we described the various methods developed... Read More
Having been to every city in the country over the... Read More
The recent Jakarta summit of Asia and Africa brought remembrance... Read More
Just because we have been leading the World in innovation... Read More
Many are condemning the latest GM Terminator seeds. Yet there... Read More
With people living longer we have some problems as those... Read More
I'VE ALWAYS ARGUED THAT ECONOMIC ILLITERACY IS VERY COSTLY.This is... Read More
The Palestinian Fatah Movement is doing whatever it can to... Read More
The original vulgarity was bylined: ?The Constipation of America's Mid-East... Read More
Currently when we transport troops we use large cargo planes... Read More
Political |