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MEMORIES OF WORLD WAR ONE |
Arthur Moore
The
Hinckley Territorials - I can remember coming down and watching them
coming out of the Palladium as was. There were rationing. I've known when
I was up at six o'clock to go down to Aldridges, the fish monger - he used
to sell rabbits as well - waiting for them to open to get anything, a
rabbit or anything. By the time I got there there might be a big long
queue. Many a time I've got right up within the last twelve or 14 and
they've sold out so I've had to go home - nothing.
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Arthur Moore
My father was in the First World War. He was a miner so he needn't have
gone. He volunteered and was in the Royal Army Medical Corps. He used to
buy me stacks of cigarette cards that he used to save off the people. He
brought a German officer's field glasses back home with him when he was on
leave. Of course I asked him how he got it, he says, 'Well I was that good
to him, he come in he had frost bitten feet, and I got him whatever he
wanted. I were looking at these glasses...and he said, 'You have 'em,' and
he showed them to me.'
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He
brought them home and could tell the time from Nuneaton, Tuttle Hill - it
were high up Tuttle Hill - when the sun was on Hinckley church clock we
could tell the time. I can't remember a big lot of celebration just
bonfires and effigies of the Kaisers - we never had street parties like
World War II... The Sunday School gave you a mug."
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Ron Milton
I can remember the outbreak of the First World War, definitely, it was
August 4 and it was a very hot day and I certainly remember the Armistice
because that was a wash day. During the First World War things were hard
to come by, vegetables and that, word got round that there was a certain
shop that'd got potatoes and I went up to get some 'cos they were valuable
then. Of course, it made me late for school. We used to queue at the Co-op
up Hill Street for tinned jam - the word went round that they'd got
some...I'd go up there, you'd stand in a long queue you know. At the
bottom of Priesthills Road, over the road was Clarendon Road, there was a
big house there with a stone wall round it. On there was posted Kitchener
with his finger pointing, 'Your country needs you'.
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