DCSIMG

Why register?

CloseX

If you have not signed up previously

It's free and only takes a minute!
Benefits to registering with us
comment on storiesComment on stories
Customise daily e-mail newslettersCustomise daily e-mail newsletters
Arrange your newspaper/digital subscriptions onlineArrange your newspaper/digital subscriptions online
Offers, promotions and deals from partnersOffers, promotions and deals from partners
Add/claim your business on Find itAdd/claim your business on Find it
  • 20/06/13
  • 13°C to 21°C Light rain
  • Midhurst 5-day weather forecast

    CloseX

    Friday 21 Jun

    Cloudy

    Temp

    High19°c

    Low12°c

    Wind

    From West

    Speed15 mph

    Saturday 22 Jun

    Cloudy

    Temp

    High16°c

    Low11°c

    Wind

    From South west

    Speed23 mph

    Sunday 23 Jun

    Light showers

    Temp

    High17°c

    Low10°c

    Wind

    From West

    Speed20 mph

    Monday 24 Jun

    Cloudy

    Temp

    High17°c

    Low8°c

    Wind

    From West

    Speed16 mph

    Tuesday 25 Jun

    Cloudy

    Temp

    High18°c

    Low8°c

    Wind

    From North west

    Speed13 mph

  • Like us
  • Follow us
  • Place your Ad
  • Subscribe

DOWN MEMORY LANE: Happy years spent in North Mundham as evacuee

The bungalow where Ernie lived with Mr and Mrs Messingham

The bungalow where Ernie lived with Mr and Mrs Messingham

ANN Dorman, of Banbury, wrote to us after a holiday in Bognor Regis led to memories of life as an evacuee in North Mundham:

While holidaying in Bognor Regis recently, we visited North Mundham where my husband Ernie, was evacuated from 11 to 14 years old.

He lived with Mr and Mrs Messingham and their sons in the boarded-up bungalow, pictured.

The lake was fields where the boys played.

One night he watched from the bungalow as a British plane crashed into a tree, ammunition exploding.

Another time, a lady pulled him into a ditch as a German plane flew by, chased by a British fighter.

He saw the pilot.

He witnessed some of the the Battle of Britain above him in the skies.

He loved the countryside and stayed even though three brothers went back to Wimbledon, homesick.

School days

The Messinghams were very good to him.

They ate a lot of stuffed rabbit.

Mr Messingham trapped and skinned moles to sell the fur to the government to line pilots’ jackets.

My husband used to spend time with the ploughman and ride his shire horse back to the stables. He remembers the man’s lunch of hunks of bread and cheese and an apple.

He loved the school. One day, after the teacher had said ‘little things please little minds’, he yelled out ‘and little trousers fit little behinds’. He got away with it.

Does anyone know the dark-haired girl he sent a note to across the classroom, saying, ‘I love you’, and receiving back, ‘I love you, too’?

In the playground, the sexes were firmly separated.

When he left, the headmistress said ‘whatever you do, take up art’. He was an art teacher for 36 years, and has sold paintings.

Get in touch

Have you got a memory you would like to share on our Down Memory Lane page?

You can get in touch by emailing vintage@chiobserver.co.uk.

Alternatively, you can write to The Observer, Unicorn House, 8 Eastgate Square, Chichester, PO19 1JN.

RELATED STORIES
 

Comments

 
 

Back to the top of the page