It was meant to get better….wasn’t it? by Brenda Rogers
I was just a toddler when war was declared in 1939, so as a child I thought being at
war with Germany was the norm! I went to live with my Gran and Grandad, and all my
Aunts and Uncles still living there. My mother worked in an armaments factory, and my
father worked down the pit and as a reserve fireman, as he had failed the army
medical when he and his younger brother had gone to join up.
Young as I was, I remember lots of things about the war. Hearing the warning sirens
and hiding with the family in Grannie’s pantry, hearing the German aeroplanes flying
overhead and waiting for the ‘all clear’ sirens to sound. Sometimes we would peep
through a forbidden crack in the blackout curtain to watch the searchlights in the
sky.
We could hear the distant explosions and see the sky lit up red in colour as
Birmingham, about twenty miles away, was bombed. This always scared me as my other
grandparents and various relations lived there. I would be taken by bus and tram to
see if everyone was ok. Nobody had a telephone in those days.
We would go past houses that looked like they had been sliced in half, the front being a
pile of rubble and the back still standing with the rooms exposed, furniture still in place.
I thought they looked like giant dolls houses, my child’s mind having no thought of the
people who had lived there just the day before.
So when the end of the war came, there was a sense of expectancy…what would this
mean? Adults in my family were jubilant, and neighbours would come round and people
would hug one another. There was a sense of great hope, and a determination to create
a better way of life, that communicated itself to child and adult alike.
I remember the huge street party, the best we could conjure up, bearing in mind that
food was rationed. There was an American army camp nearby, and one of my Aunties had
married one of the soldiers there, so he managed to contribute some extras. I
remember the huge red, white and blue Victory Vs glued to the fronts of the houses,
that took about ten years to succumb to the weather and finally disappear!
War’s end was bittersweet in my family. There was joy over the safe return of my
father’s younger brother who was taken prisoner in the retreat to Dunkirk, and who
had spent the war years in a German prisoner-of-war camp. His homecoming was
wonderful. All the family and neighbours were out to greet him as he got off the
bus, and he swung me up on to his shoulders, making me feel extra-special. Up until
that moment, he had just been a man in soldier’s uniform, in a photograph on Grannie’s
sideboard.
However, at the same time, I remember the grief and sadness felt in our family over the
death of two of my Grandfather’s brother’s sons, who were killed inthe Normandy landings.
Their family lived in the same village as we did, and though they were happy to see my uncle
return safe, at the same time their grief was a palpable thing that I remember feeling, young
though I was.
Looking back, euphoria is the best way to describe how everyone felt, and a determination to
build a better country out of the rubble, a better life for everyone. When the unbelievable
happened, with the landslide election victory of the Labour Party led by Clement Attlee in 1945,
our cup indeed was full and overflowing.
I lived in a family that was very politically astute, and I was a child who absorbed
knowledge from those around me. I grew up knowing about the class system in Britain,
and the unfairness of it. I had listened to my grandparents talking about the mine
owners, and their harsh policies towards the miners whose lifeblood lined their
pockets. Worker’s houses were owned by the mine owner. Also, the grocery store was
owned by the mine owner, so the miner’s wages went right back into the mine owner’s
pockets. After the 1926 miner’s strike, my grandparents were in debt to the mine owner
for years.
My family were great advocates of the union, the NUM. I grew up understanding the
importance of the working class needing to stand together. Our local branch of the
NUM looked after our community from the cradle to the grave. I went on a daytrip to
the seaside every year, on a charabanc supervised by union members. We were given
half a crown spending money, a bag with our lunch in it, a bottle of Vimto, and let
loose on some poor unsuspecting seaside town! Our union organised Christmas parties
for the kids and for the elderly, helped with funerals, organised the wonderful
Wakes week in the summer with the sports, dancing, and the wonderful brass band
competitions. Our union was the centre of our community.
Another thing the Union organised was a sick club where, my grandfather
would pay maybe one shilling a week, (I don’t know the exact amount) and if he was
hurt or sick, his doctor’s expenses would be paid out of the funds accrued, as he was
the breadwinner. When my grandfather had to retire, because of rheumatism so severe
that he had to walk with the aid of two sticks, he got a small pension from union funds.
His rheumatism was caused by the conditions he had worked in down the mine for years.
An example in my own family, of how desperate were the dilemmas faced by the working
man when it came to health care, or lack of it, was the time my father was hurt in
the pit. He had left school at 14yrs and gone to work down the pit. He had worked
underground for about a year when his arm got caught up in machinery, which left
his arm almost hanging off just below the shoulder. His arm was wrapped in bandages
and he was helped out of the pit in the company of an older miner. This involved a
considerable walk to the pit bottom, and then being brought up on the cage to the surface.
He then had to walk home in the company of the other miner, trying to hold his arm
together. Upon arrival at home, the doctor was sent for, and my father had to be
stripped down and washed (he was black from head to toe with coal dust, and there
was no bathroom). He was then laid on my Grannie’s scrubbed table in her kitchen,
and the doctor set and stitched my father’s arm back together. I’m sure some kind of
anaesthetic would have been used, but as a child hearing this tale, I didn’t think to
ask. My father would roll up his sleeve to exhibit an inch-wide scar round the whole
circumference of his arm, and we would hear the story again, of what it was like to
live without an NHS!
My gran was a champion at herbal concoctions for every ailment going, and everybody
in the house would be dosed up unmercifully, with the admonishment: ‘if you’re ill, we
can’t get the doctor’. So fear of ‘coming down with something’ was a spectre in everyone’s household.
I say all this to highlight the absolute joy we felt when the much-loved Aneurin Bevan
masterminded the NHS. It was nothing short of a miracle to us working people.
We couldn’t believe that bitterly though the Tories and doctors themselves fought to
prevent it coming into being, Nye Bevan had won through for us. We loved him. A true
socialist, together with Clem Attlee, with an agenda that would bring fairness and
opportunity for everyone, no matter what station in life. I saw grown men weep with
happiness at the prospect of this new, fairer society. I watched, listened, and though not
fully understanding then, I still felt that the future was opening up on a new and
better Britain. I felt it, even though I couldn’t put it into words.
I have watched this post-war vision crumble, and finally collapse, with the bitter
Miners strike of 1984. My brother was one of the last 15 workers who stayed on
strike in Staffordshire, for the duration, before having to return to work and then
watch every pit in the area be closed, with coal still down there, while Thatcher’s
government imported coal from abroad!
I’m an elderly lady now, and wonder what the future holds for my grandchildren.
People are afraid to protest because they feel they have too much to lose, what with
having to pay rent or mortgage, more and more debt to be paid off. Real power is
once again in the hands of the elite few, who hold all the wealth and have their foot
on the necks of the millions of workers from whose labour they derive their wealth.
Now we are facing the reality that we may once again have to live with the fear of
‘coming down with something’ and having to pay for medication, doctor’s visits,
stays in hospital etc.
Where are today’s Nye Bevans and Clem Attlee’s? Are you out there? We need you!
Brenda Rogers
“I have watched this post-war vision crumble…”
All under the pretext that we can not afford it, or that the business way of delivering services is more efficient and better for the people.
Both are lies:
The government can afford to spend billions on committing atrocities in undeclared wars;
Efficiency is a matter of management, *not of ownership*.