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Shropshire at War 1939-45
Paperback

Shropshire at War 1939-45

$42.99
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With the outbreak of the Second World War, Shropshire authorities immediately implemented pre-arranged plans to cope with the approaching conflict on the Home Front, including the building of air raid shelters and pillboxes and the renovation of redundant camps and disused airfields. Men not eligible for the services volunteered for the LDV (later the Home Guard), the AFS and the ARP. Women were recruited for a variety of other posts, with members of the WVS dealing with a massive influx of evacuees from Merseyside and Smethwick right from the start. Shropshire’s factories turned to armament production, coal mines increased their output and farmers cultivated more acreage (an extra 47,000 acres ploughed for food production in the first year of the war). PoW Camps sprang up, with prisoners frequently seen being transported to work on local farms, while uniformed servicemen and women from Britain, the Commonwealth and America became familiar sights on the streets. Using a variety of sources, including newspapers and verbal testimonies, the author paints a picture of the effect that six years of war had on those Salopians who, when others marched away, remained on the Home Front. Their struggles, acceptance of shortages, hardships and determination not to give in are reflected throughout this book. AUTHOR: Jan Johnstone is a proud Salopian who has lived in Shropshire all her life. She has been writing for as long as she can remember and has had numerous articles published in both historical and general interest magazines, both at home and abroad. Social history is a particular interest, as are collectables and antiques, and she also writes short stories which have been accepted for publication. Her book ‘Oswestry and Whitchurch in the Great War’, part of Pen & Sword’s ‘Your Towns and Cities in the Great War’ series, was released in 2016.
50 illustrations

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Date
2 May 2018
Pages
240
ISBN
9781473858961

With the outbreak of the Second World War, Shropshire authorities immediately implemented pre-arranged plans to cope with the approaching conflict on the Home Front, including the building of air raid shelters and pillboxes and the renovation of redundant camps and disused airfields. Men not eligible for the services volunteered for the LDV (later the Home Guard), the AFS and the ARP. Women were recruited for a variety of other posts, with members of the WVS dealing with a massive influx of evacuees from Merseyside and Smethwick right from the start. Shropshire’s factories turned to armament production, coal mines increased their output and farmers cultivated more acreage (an extra 47,000 acres ploughed for food production in the first year of the war). PoW Camps sprang up, with prisoners frequently seen being transported to work on local farms, while uniformed servicemen and women from Britain, the Commonwealth and America became familiar sights on the streets. Using a variety of sources, including newspapers and verbal testimonies, the author paints a picture of the effect that six years of war had on those Salopians who, when others marched away, remained on the Home Front. Their struggles, acceptance of shortages, hardships and determination not to give in are reflected throughout this book. AUTHOR: Jan Johnstone is a proud Salopian who has lived in Shropshire all her life. She has been writing for as long as she can remember and has had numerous articles published in both historical and general interest magazines, both at home and abroad. Social history is a particular interest, as are collectables and antiques, and she also writes short stories which have been accepted for publication. Her book ‘Oswestry and Whitchurch in the Great War’, part of Pen & Sword’s ‘Your Towns and Cities in the Great War’ series, was released in 2016.
50 illustrations

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Date
2 May 2018
Pages
240
ISBN
9781473858961