- Contributed by听
- Researcher 245126
- People in story:听
- Ingrid Penny
- Location of story:听
- London, Liverpool, Banbury
- Article ID:听
- A1289766
- Contributed on:听
- 18 September 2003
I left college in 1939 and worked throughout the war.
Holidays were mostly spent Youth Hostelling or at wok camps picking fruit, lifting potatoes etc, once outside Croydon 鈥 once in Perthshire where the owner gave us a bonus of two eggs!
Jobs 鈥 first a clerk, then in Censorship in Liverpool in Littlewoods 鈥 a glass building 鈥 translating prisonerof war letters and also letters of Jewish refugees who were interned on the Isle of Man because of the fear of invasion. In summer 1940 I took a bedsitting room at Euston in London for 10shiilings and sixpence a week. Then I moved to Stoke Newington to work in a Rest Centre for bombed-out families 鈥 24 hours on and 24 hours off midday to midday, plus one and a half hours fire watch in the night. During the Blitz I was told of for having my torch on outside 鈥 while University College was on fire close by! Work at the Rest Home suddenly ended when Hitler stopped bombing London and invaded Russia (our salvation!) Then I joined the Ministry of Health for 6 months checking on insurance cards. I finally transferred to work as a German translator at the Foreign Office at Bletchley for a year. I translated telegrams about the movement of goods, iron ore etc crossing to Spain and Italy. (We knew nothing about the decoding work going on in other huts there)
When I left I was sent to work packing household-dried milk in the old Amami shampoo factory near Victoria. Wages were 拢1.10s per week and rent was 拢1 a week in South Kensington sharing a luxury flat (拢150 a year rent) leaving 10 shillings a week for food, including lots of dripping sandwiches at 2d each.
I was then sent on a course at Chislehurst, Kent, learning to repair wireless sets for the Resistance. I traveled by 鈥淲orkmen鈥檚 train鈥 鈥 having to reach your destination by 8am to qualify for the cheap ticket meant leaving home before 7am.
Then I go a job as Teacher of French and German at Christ鈥檚 College, Finchley, boys only, where the previous teacher had had a breakdown. I later got the job of Head of German at Banbury County School 鈥 one girl took German A levels ad got into Oxford. She met one German 鈥 the pastor at the Lutheran Church, Oxford. We had lots of cycling and Youth hostelling round Banbury 鈥 we even got to the Shakespeare Memorial theatre at Stratford to see the Taming of the Shrew one weekend. Here I lived I the YMCA 鈥 salary now 拢5 a week- out o which I paid 35/- for full board sharing with 2 others! We even got lunch.
In July 1944 when I was paid two moths salary (to cover August as well during the school holidays) I paid 拢3 to join the YHA as a life member 鈥 I still get their handbook and magazine after 59 years!
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