- Contributed by
- John Arnott
- People in story:
- John Arnott, sister and parents
- Location of story:
- York, Acomb, Chestnut Grove, Station, Leeman Road
- Background to story:
- Civilian
- Article ID:
- A6761702
- Contributed on:
- 07 November 2005
John Arnott ā 12 October 2005
Although York suffered a number of sporadic bombing raids during the war, in which only a few bombs were dropped in the area, there was one major raid, aimed directly on the cathedral city. The experience of this raid, in a family setting, left a bagful of memories. This is an attempt to capture some of the many emotions expressed within that family during that long awful night, so many years ago.
THIS ONEāS FOR US
It was the night of Yorkās big raid,
Late April ā42,
That was the night, when,
Terror froze.
The siren sounded as many before,
So āup garden, to shelterā we had to go,
Mam, Dad, Sis and me, eiderdown too,
It was cold, it was damp, the shelter smelt.
That Anderson shelter, a rotten thought,
Half underground, earth on top,
Tiny entrance, black inside,
Add to that, ice-cold skin, you donāt forget.
Everyone in, Dad the last, (to batten the door),
A candle lit, to see a bit,
Into bunks, we were blocks of ice,
Steel surrounds, sweating, wet.
The night was different, oh,
Different, filled with fright,
Fear began with that engine throb,
The enemy, to be sure.
Spitfire, Hurricane, were friendly sounds, but
Heinkel enginesā¦..sounded Hell.
That throbbing sound, filled with terror,
A family, underground.
The first wave came with a thundering shock
Those whistling bombs tore the air,
And like claps of thunder, they hit the ground,
Then Mam ādid oneā, and that was worse! (1)
Bombs and guns, flashes and flares,
When will they stopā¦please go away,
Will we surviveā¦a direct hit?
In this shelter underground.
Then it happened, the heart stood still,
Cutting the air,
A bomb whistled down,
āThis oneās for usā, Dad cried.
We froze, life stopped, the end was now.
That whistle screeched and screeched its path,
It never stopped, so it seemed,
Then it didā¦and silence hit!
No one moved,
Hearts had stopped,
Afraid of the next,
That wouldnāt miss.
The raid went on,
The air was foul, so damp and cold,
No school for sure, as thoughts went by,
Collecting shrapnel be the thing to do.
Droning planes,
Holding breath, fear and fright,
A sneaky look, to get a view,
If only of, the barrage balloons.
When it stopped, we werenāt quite sure,
Like a storm, has it stopped?
But silence won, and āall clearā sounded,
From siren, ont' Council School.
We were luckyā¦one did drop nearā¦
Over fence, in gardens of maternity place!
Didnāt go offā¦in Acomb sand, (2)
Dad was rightā¦or near enough!
No folk around, in Chestnut Grove,
While āArmyā took it out.
When done, didnāt seem rightā¦
A corporal, on top of bomb!
York, was shaken that nasty night,
Holes and craters, everywhere,
Station, Leeman Road I remember well,
But āthis oneās for us' I shudder still.
This oneās for usā¦remember, big Sis?
1.The control of stomach winds was difficult for Mam!
2.Acomb was an area where the earth was predominately sand.
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