On BBC2 TV programme 'Back In Time For Christmas', Lionel Blair mentionss sheltering in Manor House tube station during WW2.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lionel_Blair
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b06sq9n1/back-in-time-for-chri...
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Thanks Roy. Found the mention at around 18m. Sounds like he was a Manor House local then.
As you'd expect, I've updated the Blair article to add in Manor House tube.
If that's a typo and you can ask your dad, yes please!
My grandparents apparently spent one night during the Blitz at the Manor House station shelter, but had to sleep on the escalators. They never did it again, preferring the relative comfort of the Anderson shelter in the back garden. That was still there in the late 1950s.
Another point, often forgotten, was the mass euthansia of dogs early in the war. Food for dogs wasn't that easy to come by and dogs also suffered with the continual firing of anti-aircraft guns and the sound of bombs. There were AA anti-aircraft guns set up in Woodlands Park/Chestnuts Park, along with two or three barrage balloons, one of which slipped anchor, knocking the top of the steeple/spire* of St Ann's Church off. * I never know which is correct. Even today the colour of the stonework of the new top of the steeple is different.
My grandparents' dog 'Tessie', a wirehaired terrier went that way in 1940. http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-24478532
I guess guilty consciences lead to this subject not being spoken about much.
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