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Wolverhampton
and World War II
Evacuation
As Wolverhampton was
considered to be a "safe" town with a lower risk of bombing,
there was not the mass evacuation
of children from
the area as there was in other parts of the country. It was the
case in fact that Wolverhampton accepted evacuees from elsewhere.
'Secret
and confidential' plans were put in place to receive evacuees at
railway stations and disperse them around the area:

The table below shows
that large public buildings such as the Civic Hall, cinemas, parish
rooms and schools were to be ready to receive almost 6,000 evacuees
from areas at immediate risk of bombing and invasion:

Click on the image to enlarge
(C-UD-TET/J47)

Click on the image to enlarge
The
letter above was written to a school requesting the admittance of
a 9 year old girl, from London who had been evacuated to Tettenhall
c. 1941/2 (D-EDS-106/9/3)
In
the summer of 1944 when the London area was under heavy aerial attack
a number of school children from London were evacuated to the Wolverhampton
area.

Extract
from SS Mary and John Infant School Log Book 1944
(D-EDS-105/4/1)
Towards
the end of the war plans were made to allow evacuees to return home:


Bilston
Borough Council minutes (LB352)
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©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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