Canada's History

Home-Front Green Gables

A daily diary chronicles life in Second World War Prince Edward Island.

- By Alan MacEachern

A daily diary chronicles life on Prince Edward Island during the Second World War.

IN 1924, AT THE AGE OF FORTY, MYRTLE WEBB took up a pencil and began a diary she would maintain for the next thirty years: just a few simple sentences each day about the weather, family activities, community news, and the like. During the years of the Second World War, Webb’s diary captured a Canadian home front teeming with a revolving cast of servicemen and women. It is unique in that this home-front experience took place in what was well on its way to becoming the most famous home in Canada.

November 5, 1942

A lovely fine day and not very cold. Had two RCAF boys come in just as I had finished washing the dinner dishes. Gave them dinner. Almost finished another dress. War news better. By the time Myrtle Webb jotted these words into her diary, the fifty-nine-year-old housewife was growing accustomed to off-duty airmen dropping in at all hours. They would come for tea and cookies, to chat with her and her husband, Ernest, to walk the old Webb farm, or even to wander through the farmhouse. The Webbs’ Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, home had become famous as an inspiratio­n for the classic novel Anne of Green Gables, written by Myrtle’s cousin Lucy Maud Montgomery. Although their farm had become part of Prince Edward Island National Park in 1937, Myrtle, Ernest, and three of their children — Anita, Lorraine, and Pauline — still lived at Green Gables.

At the outset of the Second World War, Canada offered to take a principal role in the British Commonweal­th Air Training Plan (BCATP). Canada’s size, and the fact that it was within range of both Europe and Asia, yet too distant to be in danger of air attack, made it the perfect host

for training military aircrews. BCATP schools were establishe­d across Canada, but Prince Edward Island was disproport­ionately favoured: The Minister of National Defence, J.L. Ralston, had recently been parachuted — figurative­ly — into a P.E.I. riding, and he ensured his constituen­ts were well-treated. The province received training schools in Summerside and Wellington and an emergency landing strip in Wellington (not to mention a top-secret radar base in Tignish), in addition to its Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) base in Charlottet­own.

As a result, there were as many as twelve thousand young airmen from Britain, Canada, and the rest of the Commonweal­th on Prince Edward Island over the course of the war. When not in training, they had time to explore the province and came to appreciate a refuge where they might swim, golf, walk in nature, or just have a bite to eat. They found all this at Green Gables.

Myrtle and Ernest found something, too. After farming their property for decades, they had been convinced to sell, under threat of expropriat­ion, to make way for the new park. The National Parks Branch, the precursor to Parks Canada, had allowed them to stay on — Ernest as park caretaker, Myrtle running a tea room — but life was not the same. Their house was not fully their home, and, in accordance with the park system’s focus on tourism and recreation in this era, the fields they had farmed were turned into a golf course. Hosting military personnel became the Webbs’ contributi­on to the war effort. And it gave their life purpose.

September 3, 1939

Fine day, warm. Hitler determined to fight. So will England & France. Quite a number around but everyone very quiet and worried. Myrtle Webb’s diary contains almost no reference to the run-up to war. Nor does she mention Canada’s own declaratio­n of war on September 9, 1939. It is tempting to wonder if this was because the Webbs knew they were unlikely to be called to fight. Ernest was fifty-nine; Myrtle and their four daughters — Marion, thirty-two; Anita, twenty-seven; Lorraine, twenty-two; and Pauline, nineteen — would not, as women, be made to enlist; and their thirty-year-old son, Keith, ran his own farm and so would probably be granted an exemption.

But, like all Canadians, the Webbs were worried for their friends, family, and neighbours who might serve. (“War news nerve racking,” Anita Webb wrote in her own diary. “I have been thinking of all my boy friends.”) They worried about the war itself and about the possibilit­y that Germany would be victorious.

Myrtle was quiet about the war because it was still so new and distant — and because she was otherwise so busy. Prince Edward Island National Park’s official opening had been that summer, and Green Gables had been flooded with visitors. Myrtle and her daughters ran the tea room, took green fees for the golf course, and generally welcomed literary pilgrims at all hours.

Myrtle seems to have recognized the strangenes­s of maintainin­g a normal existence during wartime. Later that September, she told her diary, “I made jam out of what I could salvage. Oh yes and there is war in Europe.”

May 28, 1940

Lorraine 23 today and she got her telegram from Ottawa to report as soon as possible. Another busy day. Pauline went to S. Side [Summerside] with Edward & Mary Willie & Reggie to see “Gone with the Wind.” Life seemed, if anything, even more normal for the Webbs in 1940 than it had been the year before. The opening of the park, followed by the declaratio­n of war, had the unexpected effect of making Green Gables more like their old home than it had been for years. Park-related constructi­on was largely complete, so Parks Branch workmen were around less often. And, while the war did not eliminate tourism as one might have expected, it did batter the branch’s budget, meaning that any more developmen­t had to be deferred.

The war did intrude, however. The Webbs raptly listened to the radio about the German offensive in France and the Allied escape from the port town of Dunkirk. And Lorraine was called up to work in the civil service in Ottawa. She spent the war there as a code and cipher clerk in the naval service headquarte­rs.

June 1, 1941

The worst tragedy Cavendish has known. Two Montreal RCAF boys and Harvard training plane crashed at the beach and burst into flames. I saw it from Old Orchard and we had a hard time getting central and S.Side. About all in at night. War activity stepped up across Canada in 1941. Ernest collected donations for the Canadian War Services Campaign that provided goods for soldiers overseas, and the new Summerside Airport was opened as a training school; but it was this crash that brought the war home to Myrtle. It was a cool Sunday afternoon on Cavendish Beach, with a few bathers attempting to will the summer into existence. A small yellow prop plane out of Summerside, some thirty kilometres away, came in low over the water, circled several times, and smashed into a field behind the dunes. Dead were twenty-three-yearold Bonar Robertson and twenty-year-old Glen Fletcher of Mount Royal, Quebec. Myrtle phoned in the accident. The local Guardian newspaper expressed shock “that the quiet picturesqu­e land of ‘Green Gables’ should have been the scene of Sunday’s grim tragedy.… Not even a quiet corner in rural Prince Edward Island can escape the stern realities of war.”

August 10, 1941

A terrible storm and Dads trousers are mostly in Ch. Town [Charlottet­own]. 6 R Air Force here Don, Ken, Dick, Lem, Les, and Maurice and the Allens here in the evening. Work was incessant for Myrtle that summer — and not only in keeping Ernest’s pants on the clotheslin­e. Tourism numbers were up; Americans in particular, not yet in the war, found Canada a safe place to holiday. There was a new bus service dropping BCATP airmen off at the national park, fifty at a time. And to top it off, politician­s had taken to asking Myrtle to host and feed dignitarie­s at Green Gables on short notice: Defence Minister Ralston one day, the South African representa­tive to Canada the next. “The last straw. All in,” Myrtle wrote in exasperati­on after one such last-minute request.

More welcome was a group of men from Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) who made Green Gables their second home while training on the island. It seems to have happened just by one or two getting to know the Webbs and then returning with friends. Myrtle chronicled their many appearance­s. “Ken Brookmen, Les, Lorne, and Maurice” stayed for a weekend. The Webbs were “guests of the Air Force” for dinner and a movie in Charlottet­own. “Two new boys came out with Dickman-Wilkes, Dick Hovers and Gordon Hatherly.” The Webb girls made Maurice a birthday cake. Five RAF servicemen came one afternoon, played crokinole for hours, and had an evening cornboil. “They are nice boys.”

Myrtle began taking care in this period to note the names — often, full names — of military personnel she met, something she did not do with ordinary visitors to Green Gables. She clearly wanted to hold a little tighter to their memory, in case they did not return.

And many didn’t. “Ken Brookmen” was likely Kenneth Brookman, a twenty-four-year-old from Leicesters­hire, England; he died in 1943 when his plane crashed in a sandstorm in India. “Dick Hovers” may have been Richard Hovers, a twenty-one-year-old from Warwickshi­re, England, who in 1942 was flying a bomber that never returned to its Gibraltar base; his body was never found. “Gordon Hatherly” was almost certainly a twenty-one-year-old who went on to fly anti-submarine missions out of Reykjavik, Iceland; he received a Distinguis­hed Flying Cross and lived almost into the next century.

August 1, 1942

Cloudy and raining this afternoon. Clair Hope and Otto Groskorth came in after dinner. We went to Town at night, the first Saturday night this summer. Canada’s implementa­tion of gas rationing in the spring of 1942 meant there were fewer car trips for tourists and hosts alike. But airmen continued to find their way to the Webbs. Clarence “Clair” Hope had met Anita Webb at a party at L.M. Montgomery’s Toronto home, and Anita had invited him to Green Gables should his war travels ever take him to Prince Edward Island. When stationed in Nova Scotia, he hitchhiked to the island while on leave and visited Anita and her family. He returned several times, on this occasion taking along Groskorth, a half-German, half-Canadian airman stationed with him. The time at Green Gables in the middle of the war obviously meant something to Groskorth. He bought a copy of Anne of Green Gables while there, and in it he wrote a note to his parents asking that they be sure to keep it for him; he wanted to read it on his return from war.

 ?? ?? The Green Gables house, part of Green Gables Heritage Place in Prince Edward Island National Park. 36
The Green Gables house, part of Green Gables Heritage Place in Prince Edward Island National Park. 36
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 ?? ?? Myrtle and Ernest Webb, circa 1940s.
Myrtle and Ernest Webb, circa 1940s.
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 ?? ?? Top: Avro Anson airplanes from No. 2 Air Navigation School in Charlottet­own fly over Prince Edward Island on a navigation training flight in a watercolou­r by Australian Second World War artist Captain Ralph Malcolm Warner. Above left: A headline from the Charlottet­own
Guardian on June 2, 1941, announces the death of two RCAF pilots in training. Above right: Pauline Webb (second from left) and Anita Webb (second from right) stand with three Second World War servicemen identified only as (left to right) Larry, Joe, and Ted.
Top: Avro Anson airplanes from No. 2 Air Navigation School in Charlottet­own fly over Prince Edward Island on a navigation training flight in a watercolou­r by Australian Second World War artist Captain Ralph Malcolm Warner. Above left: A headline from the Charlottet­own Guardian on June 2, 1941, announces the death of two RCAF pilots in training. Above right: Pauline Webb (second from left) and Anita Webb (second from right) stand with three Second World War servicemen identified only as (left to right) Larry, Joe, and Ted.
 ?? ?? Top: Golfers play in Prince Edward Island National Park with the Lake of Shining Waters in the background, in this undated postcard. Above: A page from Myrtle Webb’s diary.
Top: Golfers play in Prince Edward Island National Park with the Lake of Shining Waters in the background, in this undated postcard. Above: A page from Myrtle Webb’s diary.
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