Western Daily Press

Wartime reports reveal everyday heroism of RVS

- ROD MINCHIN news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

THEY were the backbone of the home front during the Second World War, and to many they were the Army that Hitler forgot.

More than one million women joined the Royal Voluntary Service, and thanks to their tireless efforts the “women in green” – as they became fondly known – were central to winning the war.

The organisati­on was founded in 1938 by Lady Stella Reading as the Women’s Voluntary Service for Air Raid Precaution­s as Britain prepared for war.

They assisted civilians during air raids by providing emergency rest centres, also running mobile canteens and helping with the evacuation and billeting of thousands of children.

By 1943, the Royal Voluntary Service was involved in almost every aspect of wartime life from the collection of salvage to the knitting of socks and gloves for merchant seamen.

To mark 80 years of the Royal Voluntary Service, a photograph­y exhibition was held in London to tell the remarkable history of the organisati­on.

And the charity, which has now transforme­d itself into a leading provider of social care, has also opened its extensive archive in Wiltshire to tell some of the extraordin­ary stories of its members during the Second World War.

Many of these accounts of everyday heroism are contained within the “monthly narrative report” that each centre had to complete in quadruplic­ate, with one copy kept by the centre, one sent to the county office, one to the regional office and one to headquarte­rs in London.

Many of the reports detail the difficulti­es faced when helping thousands of families and unaccompan­ied children who were escaping the Blitz – including many who went home.

The centre organiser for Dorchester & Rural District wrote in March 1941: “WVS did all waiting, washing up and bathing of children.

“The girls were washed two at a time in one bath, which had to be thoroughly scrubbed between each lot.”

In May 1941, West Dorset District report noted: “So long as fares are paid and re-evacuation is possible at any moment, evacuees, including families with children, constantly return to London.

“This makes great difficulti­es for the country organisers, as the village hostesses quite naturally resent being used by the evacuees as in-expensive lodging-house keepers.”

In nearby Wimborne, a report in June 1941 detailed how locals were helping the evacuated children cope with their new lives.

“I thought this advisable as formerly when the evacuated children were asked if they had made any friends the answer was nearly always ‘the other children do not want to make friends with us’,” the report said.

As well as helping evacuees, members of Royal Voluntary Service attended anti-gas lectures and learnt how to tackle fires.

They also knitted, sending parcels overseas to British troops, as well as to the Soviet Union and the occupied countries.

By November 1942, a work party in St Austell Rural centre had completed 4,042 articles since the war began and raised £213 for “comforts for the troops”.

In spite of falling ceilings, we managed

to carry on for a fortnight in the remains

A 1942 RVS REPORT

A report noted: “Mrs Tucker, aged 82, is the oldest member of the Party and her record to date is 118 pairs of socks, 21 scarves, 18 pairs of cuffs and 89 squares for blankets.”

Volunteers in Portsmouth taught the men to mend their own clothes who were becoming “quite enthusiast­ic” about learning new skills.

They also complained about “severe pilfering” of knitted sweaters, scarves and socks from a parcel sent to the Merchant Navy.

In Wareham, the Bridge House

 ??  ?? A Royal Voluntary Society photo of a group of children in a cart pulled by Chummy thedonkey at Coram Court nursery in Lyme Regis, Dorset during the Second World War
A Royal Voluntary Society photo of a group of children in a cart pulled by Chummy thedonkey at Coram Court nursery in Lyme Regis, Dorset during the Second World War

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