Showing posts with label Woolwich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woolwich. Show all posts

Sunday 30 March 2014

A Family's War - Part One

Of all wars in human history, the Second World War is unmatched in its horror. It took 27,000 lives on each and every one of its 2,194 days. It shattered families, levelled cities and erased countries. Few people anywhere escaped without loss. Many struggled and failed to keep their humanity and compassion intact. Perhaps our family was luckier than others, but our parents and grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins were changed by the war, with outcomes that affect us still today.
A heavy sense of doom hung over England in the late 1930s. The Great War had ended only 20 years earlier, leaving millions of young men dead or maimed, crippling the economy and reducing Britain to a second rate power. "Never again" people said, and yet another war edged closer with each new crisis.
No one was panicking, but people were uneasy. Newspapers were full of talk about “the invincible bomber,” the horrors of poison gas, and the destruction awaiting London. My father's dad was deeply affected by the popular novel What happened to the Corbetts by Nevil Shute. Published in early 1939, it predicted the devastation that would follow the bombing of England’s major cities.
We were a family of working class Londoners, born and raised and expecting to die in the tiny, shoddy, mold-infested Victorian homes that lined the narrow streets and lanes surrounding the docks and warehouses and factories along the Thames river in the East End neighbourhoods of Woolwich, Plumstead and East Ham. Some of our family, a lucky few, had escaped to the newer suburbs of Eltham and Bexleyheath, but they still weren't far from their roots.
By the summer of 1939 Tom and Eva Napier, known to everyone as Uncle Tom and Aunt Eva, knew war was coming. They were fatalistic about their own chances, but were determined their 11-year-old daughter June would escape. 
One day that summer, Aunt Eva and June boarded a train full with other mothers and children, for the 120-mile journey north to the town of Loughborough. There, in the hoped-for safety of her sister Millie’s drawing room, Eva said a tearful goodbye to her daughter. It was the first time they had ever been separated.
Tom tried to enlist, even though at 38 he was twice the age of the conscripts then being called up. The recruiting officer rejected him, not because of his age, but because his job as a blacksmith at the Beckton Gas Works would be important in the coming war effort.
The decisive moment came in August. After swallowing up Austria and much of Czechoslovakia, Hitler was now massing his armies on Germany’s border with Poland. Britain had pledged to come to Poland's aid if Germany were to attack, so on August 25th the Prime Minister issued an ultimatum, declaring to Hitler “Invade Poland and you go to war with us.” Hitler ignored this warning: on Friday, September 1st he invaded.
June was sitting in her Aunt Millie’s garden listening to the wireless on the following Sunday, when a voice interrupted the program. She never forgot what happened next:
“Here is an announcement. At 11:15 - that is, in about two minutes, the prime minister will broadcast to the nation. Please stand by.”
“This is London. You will now hear a statement by the prime minister.”
Then the somber voice of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain:
“I am speaking to you from the Cabinet Room at 10 Downing Street. This morning the British ambassador in Berlin handed the German Government the final note stating that unless we heard from them by eleven o’clock that they were prepared, at once, to withdraw their troops from Poland, a state of war would exist between us. I have to tell you now that no such undertaking has been received and that consequently this country is at war with Germany.”
June really didn't know what ‘war’ would mean for others, but she knew what it would mean for her: separation from her dear mum and dad and an unhappy, uncertain future with Aunt Millie.
In the first rush of fear following the declaration of war, my grandmother Elsie Campbell, Eva Napier’s sister, made the quick decision to evacuate her children - 12-year-old Elsie (“Babs”), 11-year-old Richard (“Boy”), and my mother, tiny three-year-old Margaret - from their home in the East London suburb of Eltham. It turned out to be a gut-wrenching move, and even the safety of Ashford, a town just 60 miles away, couldn’t outweigh the concern Elsie felt when she thought of leaving her children in the care of strangers.
The children were split up. Boy stayed with Mr. and Mrs. Strand, who loved him and treated him as if he were their own son. Margaret and Babs were billeted in a home completely different. Margaret remembers: “The lady wasn’t nice to us at all, and I was really scared when my sister was at school, and I was by myself. We had to eat all our dinner if we wanted desert because she put desert on the same plate, without it being washed first. I was extremely unhappy . . .”
For most of our family, the first tangible sign of war was the blackout, when the streetlights went out, not to come on again for six years. People had to cover every window with heavy curtain material, so that no light could escape. Lorries and cars had to drive with their headlights masked so that only a tiny slit of light would show.
The blackout heightened the palpable fear people felt, but their initial panic started to disappear once they realised that nothing else was going to happen. Over 300,000 soldiers, almost the entire British army, had crossed over to France and rushed up to Germany’s border, where, with half a million Frenchmen, they all sat down and did nothing while Germany completed its lightning conquest of Poland. They carried on doing nothing all through the winter of 1939 and into the spring of 1940. People started talking about the “Phony War” and gradually went back to normality.
Elsie brought her children back home. Margaret was the first to return, after just two weeks, and the others followed soon after. By Christmas 1939 almost all the children evacuated from East London had returned, but there were exceptions: Eva Napier wasn’t going to take any chances – June was doomed to continue her exile with Aunt Millie.
The Phony War ended abruptly on April 9th, 1940, when Hitler suddenly struck north into neutral Denmark and Norway. Denmark fell in a day.
A month later, on May 10th, Hitler hurled his armies south through neutral Holland to smash into the Allies in Belgium and France. Within hours, startled and unprepared British and French troops were in panic-struck retreat. The same day, Neville Chamberlin resigned as Britain’s Prime Minister and Winston Churchill was appointed in his place.
The following six weeks were amongst the most decisive in all of Britain’s long history.
The British army in France collapsed. It suffered massive losses as it retreated to the tiny French seaside town of Dunkirk. There, cut off from supplies and ammunition, with their backs to the sea and the enemy on three sides, the most famous regiments of the British army prepared to make their last stand.
Unknown to most of the world, for five days Churchill and the members of the British War Cabinet debated negotiation and capitulation to Hitler. For some, it seemed the only reasonable alternative in the face of Germany’s overwhelming firepower. In the end Churchill’s arguments and strength of personality won out. Whatever the consequences for its people, Britain would fight on.
The English then proved again that they are at their best in adversity when thousands of weekend sailors, fishermen and ferryboat captains endured relentless German bombing, strafing and artillery fire as they sailed their small craft across the channel to Dunkirk to bring the British army back home. Soon everyone was celebrating the rescue of 200,000 soldiers from the beaches as the Miracle of Dunkirk, in popular perception turning a massive defeat into a victory.
But it was no victory. Most of the British army had been rescued, but it had left behind all its tanks, guns and vehicles in France and half the Royal Air Force’s bombers had been shot down.
And there were no miracles for the French. Demoralized and badly led, they simply evaporated in the face of the German advance. Paris was abandoned; the Germans captured the city by simply marching in. The French government sued for peace on June 16th.
Now Britain stood alone.
Most people had no doubt the Germans would turn their half-million-man army on England, launching an immediate invasion. With the British army bereft of its weapons, the country seemed to be almost defenseless.
Hitler was confident: “Our enemies are little worms. I saw them at Munich.” On July 16th he issued “Directive No. 16”, ordering his war machine to prepare for the invasion of Britain.
Initial plans called for an invasion force of 500,000 to 800,000 men. The tanks and soldiers that had swept through the Belgian and French armies and shattered the British Expeditionary Force were already moving to the Normandy coast, where they began training for the invasion of London.
German preparations began with the first bombing attacks on English airfields and aircraft factories.
Churchill’s commanders gathered the few remaining fully armed and unbloodied soldiers and cobbled them into a unit they called 7th Corps. This became the army’s only fully equipped mobile force. It was made up of just 25,000 men.
At the heart of 7th Corps was the 1st Canadian Infantry Division, which included two brothers, Jim and Doug Robb, farm hands from the distant frontier of the Peace River Country of northwestern Alberta. They had volunteered on the outbreak of war in September 1939 and arrived in England three months later.
Here was one of the great ironies of the war. When war was declared, Canada’s full-time army consisted of only 4,261 men, 4 modern anti-aircraft guns, 5 mortars, 92 machine guns and two tanks. Now, nine months later, the Canadian members of 7th Corps were the best-equipped, best-trained, best-prepared troops in England.
Well-trained as they were, it would still be almost impossible for 7th Corps, outnumbered by up to 20 to one, to do more than delay the Germans in the fields of Kent and Hampshire. Churchill’s commanders intended to gather the remainder of Britain’s army behind the General Headquarters Anti-tank Line. Grand as it sounded, this was really nothing more than a big ditch stretching from Bristol in the west to Maidstone in the east.
If the Germans were to break through the General Headquarters Anti-tank Line, the way to London would be open. The city’s final defense would then fall upon the Home Guard. That meant our family.
The Home Guard was an idea of Churchill’s. It was created in May 1940 so that men who were prohibited from enlisting in the army because they were in critical civilian jobs, or were too old or too sick, could still take up arms. The response to Churchill’s idea was overwhelming. Within 24 hours, 250,000 had lined up at local police stations to sign up. My grandfather Jack Nice and my mother’s Uncle tom and cousin Will Hickford were among them.

The British plan called for a defensive line running right through the centre of Woolwich, sacrificing all the suburbs to the south and east, including Eltham, where my mother’s family lived. To stiffen this line the Home Guard dug deep trenches and put up concrete barriers and pillboxes. To prevent the landing of German parachutists, they erected tall wooden stakes at regular intervals on Woolwich Common, Plumstead Common and other areas of open ground. To confuse the Germans on the ground they removed all road signs and street names (confusing most Londoners too: according to The Times, “citizens venturing ‘off the beaten track’ will be able to experience the exhilarating feeling of being explorers”).

I wonder if Woolwich Home Guard volunteer Jack Nice would really have obeyed his orders to fight to the death. He certainly wouldn’t be fighting to defend his own home, 70 Fox Hill, which was on the wrong side of the line.

So too was the tidy home kept by Will and Elsie Canning at 17 Preston Drive in Bexleyheath. It was their pride and joy, purchased new just five years before. Elsie would be safe – she and their two children had evacuated to Leicester, far from the potential battle for London – but Will, normally commuting to an office job in central London, would be fighting a guerilla war. He and his Home Guard unit planned to use their homemade weapons and naive ingenuity to slow the German assault before it exploded against the defensive positions dug into the streets of Woolwich.
Across the river in East Ham, Tom Napier and his friends defended their section of the outermost line. The army had refused Tom’s attempt to enlist back in 1939, but now he was finally bearing arms for his country.
Even though defending London would be a big task, the Home Guard had little with which to do it. They were a bit of a rag-tag army of pirates, with no uniforms and without even weapons, except what they could scrounge for themselves.
One Home Guard unit was equipped with 48 pikes borrowed from the Drury Lane Theatre. Another created a “Cutlass Platoon.” In another, guardsmen wore roller skates. In the East End one unit created grenades by inserting razor blades into potatoes. Most just practiced with wooden guns or simply pretended they were carrying weapons. Eventually most of the Home Guard received rifles – 63,000 shotguns and sporting rifles donated by private citizens and by September some 500,000 ex-World War I rifles contributed by the Canadian government.
Making a commitment to the Home Guard was not easy. Jack Nice, a father of two, was holding down his regular job as a driver on the night shift for the Royal Arsenal Cooperative Society, and then spending every third day, more than 80 hours a month without pay, training with his Home Guard unit, the 34th County of London Battalion. The Battalion trained at a local school and at the Matchless Motorcycle works at 44 Plumstead Road.
The Germans reacted to the Home Guard with a mixture of contempt and concern. The Nazi Propaganda Minister referred to them as “rabble” and a “mob of amateurs armed with broom-sticks and darts,” but later he accused them of being gangsters. He also announced that any Home Guard members caught with weapons in their hands by the German invaders would be shot as terrorists.
Hitler’s generals had good reason to worry. In this war so far they had achieved enormous success by attacking civilians and by devastating towns and cities, first destroying each country’s morale and its people’s will to fight, before then turning on the defending armies themselves. Now, for the first time, the civilians of a target country were giving notice that they would fight back. As Winston Churchill said in July 1940, “The vast mass of London itself could easily devour a hostile army and we would rather see London laid in ashes and ruins than that it should be tamely and abjectly enslaved.”
This wasn’t just a politician’s bluster. In the summer of 1940 most people in Britain expected the Germans to come, but they were almost unanimous in their will to fight. One newspaper, the Daily Express, helpfully published an article entitled “How to Receive a German Paratrooper who lands in your Back Garden.” The story included a German translation of the phrase ‘Hands up: you are my prisoner.’
The English didn’t have to wait long before the war came to them. It started in the skies over Essex, Kent, Surrey and Hampshire with the first Luftwaffe bombing attacks of the campaign that became known as the Battle of Britain. The Germans were fighting to establish air supremacy over southern England, so that they could launch their invasion unopposed. They planned to bomb airfields, destroy aircraft factories and shoot Spitfires and Hurricanes out of the sky.

Later, Churchill would say, “Never was so much owed by so many to so few.” The “few” were some 1,100 young fighter pilots, a great number still in their teens. These young pilots took off day after day, sometimes three or even four times a day, charging against the never-ending waves of German fighters and bombers over the skies of England. Within three months a third of them would be dead, their bodies torn by German cannon shells, burned alive by fire, or smashed into the ground in the crumbled wreckage of their damaged aircraft.
The Battle of Britain was also fought by thousands of men and women on the ground, serving in the air force and working in factories around the country.
Aircraft technicians laboured around the clock to patch and re-arm the British fighters and to repair bomb-cratered runways and hangars, sometimes themselves under direct attack from the air.
All along England’s southern coastline young women tracked the German aircraft from primitive radar stations, staying at their posts even while bombs were falling around them. They were feeding vital early warning to “controllers,” again mostly women, who launched and directed the RAF pilots so that they could counter-attack the Germans at exactly the right time and place.
And when the Spitfires and Hurricanes were shot down, RAF aircraft recovery crews rushed to the site of the crash, salvaging all the equipment they could, and shipping it to aircraft factories and repair depots. Sometimes crashed aircraft could be patched and repaired, to fly again just days later.
In factories around the country ordinary men and women worked beyond exhaustion to produce replacement aircraft faster than the Germans could shoot them down. German bombers relentlessly targeted these factories, but no amount of bombing could bring the production of the precious aircraft to a stop.
Beside the Thames in the centre of Woolwich, the Royal Arsenal was the biggest munitions factory in England. Here many thousands of factory hands worked day and night to produce the ammunition the RAF needed in its battle, and to replace the ammunition the army had lost in France, and would need in its struggle to repel the coming invasion. In the days after Dunkirk output at the Arsenal rose by a quarter as production accelerated to 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Workers set a blistering pace, toiling under the stress of constant threat of attack from the air.
All that summer as Dick Campbell made his way home after his shift at the Arsenal he could look up into the sky and see the contrails of the Spitfires and Hurricanes twisting and turning in their desperate battle with the Luftwaffe, perhaps firing off ammunition that had been in his own hands just days before.
One day in July, whole families crowded around a Messerschmitt fighter plane that had crashed on Plumstead Common, just a mile or so from the Arsenal. Jack Nice and other members of the Woolwich Home Guard took turns standing sentry around the wreckage, while ignoring their own families stealing pieces of the aircraft as souvenirs. Jack himself brought his own three-year-old son, Eddie (my father), to marvel at this example of the RAF’s superiority in the air.
While the Royal Air Force fought to hold back the Luftwaffe, Britain’s war leaders prepared for the inevitable invasion. They displayed a brave face to the public, but their private correspondence shows just how worried they were. “The more I see the nakedness of our defences the more appalled I am! Untrained men, no arms, no transport and no equipment,” wrote the commander of the army in his secret diary. “The ghastly part of it is that I feel certain that we can have only a few more weeks left before the Boche attacks!” Alexander Cadogan, Permanent Under Secretary of the Foreign Office wrote that “. . . everything is as gloomy as can be . . . Probability is that Hitler will attempt invasion in next fortnight. As far as I can see, we are, after years of leisurely preparation, completely unprepared. We have simply got to die at our posts – a far better fate than capitulating to Hitler as those damned Frogs have done. But uncomfortable.”
In East Ham and Woolwich and Eltham, our family and their neighbours were also preparing for war.
Local borough councils were building air raid shelters in the basements and cellars of most public buildings and in streets and parks. They erected air raid sirens on almost every street corner.
Families were encouraged to build their own bomb shelters too. The government produced millions of “Anderson” bomb shelters. These cost each family £7, but were free to those earning less than £250 a year. At the beginning of the war, few of our family had to pay. Lorries came round dropping off kits full of corrugated iron and a few printed instructions. As June Napier recalls, homeowners and tenants had to “get on and build them themselves,” half burying them in the ground and heaping dirt on top. The instructions certainly left room for individual creativity.
In some areas, including many parts of Woolwich and Plumstead, people found it difficult to dig down far enough to install the shelters. Once they had dug a hole more than a foot or so, water started seeping in. Many always had water in their shelters, which made them very uncomfortable to use. Some people refused to use their shelters, choosing to take a chance inside their homes. For a few, this would turn out to be a fatal decision.
If people lived in homes with no garden, or a garden too small for an Anderson shelter, the local council issued them with “Morrison” shelters. These were big metal cages, with wire mesh on the sides. Many families, like Will and Elsie Canning in Bexleyheath, set them up in their parlours or dining rooms, crowding out the furniture. Some stacked the dining room table and chairs on top of the shelter and began enjoying formal dinners served with a bird’s eye view.
The government worried that the Germans would use gas, just as they had in the Great War. Local councils painted the tops of most red pillar post boxes with a yellow gas detector liquid that would change colour when poison was in the air. Everyone was issued with a gas mask and told to carry it at all times.
People struggled with the masks. They were awkward to put on and uncomfortable to wear. Margaret Campbell was just a toddler, so her gas mask was fitted with Mickey Mouse ears, which made wearing it a little bit more of an adventure.
A quarter of a million Londoners signed on as Air Raid Precautions (ARP) volunteers. They became “wardens” responsible for the emergency precautions in their neighbourhoods and “auxiliary” firefighters, nurses and ambulance drivers.
The ARP wardens could be heard patrolling neighbourhood streets in the evenings on their bicycles, crying “put that light out!” Everyone had been given instructions for making blackout curtains or blinds. Tom Napier made his out of thick black-tarred paper nailed to a wooden lathe. It looked awful until his daughter came up with the bright idea of painting it. June copied a calendar or birthday card and created a huge colourful picture of a country market scene, completely covering the blind and brightening up the whole living room. She remembers that it was her Dad’s “pride and joy.”
Most of the responsibility for the war preparations fell onto the local borough councils. Although not directly involved in the military build-up, they had to organize the local ARPs, first aid posts, stretcher parties, public bomb shelters, clean-up crews, and all the other activities that fell under the category of “civil defense.”
Some borough councils did a better job than did others. One of the least prepared was West Ham, an area that included Canning Town and Silvertown. “Rather Pickwickian” noted one very disappointed government official when he reviewed the borough’s plans and inspected its preparations. He was right: West Ham’s plans would soon be tested, and they would fail.
The barrage balloons were the most visible sign that London was at war. Over a thousand of these great silver blimps hovered over the city, trailing thick steel cables designed to force bombers to fly higher than normal, spoiling their bomb aiming. Giant searchlights were also set up all over the city, strategically placed so that they could trap bombers, illuminating them for the anti-aircraft guns that would fire from parks and other public spaces. It all looked very impressive, but many wondered how effective these defences would be if the German bombers tested them.
All that summer, while people in London were bracing for the coming attack, June Napier was plotting for ways to escape from the safety of Loughborough to her family in East Ham.
Her Aunt Millie was a cold unfeeling woman, never once giving June a hug or a kiss or any sign of affection of any kind. She and her husband, Fred Baxter, had moved to Loughborough to escape from working class London. June believed her Aunt and Uncle had ideas “above their station” and thought they had become “better class.” They looked down on June, tolerating her only out of necessity. They believed if the government was going to force them to take in evacuees from London, it was better to have poor relations living with them than strangers. In all they took in three children and for a while they also billeted a captain from a nearby barracks. As June said, “to Aunt Millie this was rather grand - she would never have considered a private!”
 “Aunt Millie was a real martinet. Everything had to be done just so. I had to come home from school, come in the back way, take my shoes off on the doorstep and change into slippers, put on a pinny, do my homework, etc. At lunchtime I had to go home (if Aunt Millie was going out to the various things she belonged to) and do her hair for her. I had to pin it with great metal hairpins into big fat sausages all round her head. She used to take me to things like ‘Knitting vests for African babies,’ held in the Mayor’s parlour (very posh!), and ‘Rolling bandages for our troops’ and so on. I joined the St John’s Ambulance Brigade (under age at 12, but it was wartime and they turned a blind eye) and gained my First Aid certificate. At night, if I hadn’t had enough calories and vitamins, I had to have a lettuce sandwich with brown bread.
“Everyone had to be quiet for the news at 6 PM and 9 PM, and Uncle Fred used to go apoplectic (really purple, and his eyes would bulge) if anybody dared to utter a word while it was on. He was a strange man, with a shock of hair that stood up on end and very prominent eyes, which glared at me, and they always seemed to be popping out at me with indignation, though I was never sure what I had done to be in disfavour. He was fanatical about cards, and made me play cards with him just to make up the numbers, and if whilst partnering him I dared to do anything that caused him to lose, he would be beside himself. He used to throw his cards down and stomp off into the other room. He was known in the family to be a very bad loser, and everyone was cheating except him!”
While June was suffering in Loughborough and writing to her parents, campaigning to be allowed to come back to London, Dick Campbell was just as determined to get away.
Dick had taken advantage of the rapid build-up in war production by finding a position in Quality Control at the Woolwich Arsenal, escaping from his old job as a “Brickie” (a Bricklayer’s Mate) on construction sites. But now, in the summer of 1940, as it became obvious that war would be coming to Woolwich and Eltham, he started looking for work in other cities.
At one point, he thought there might be something in Manchester and went up there to see what he could find. Not once had Elsie ever spent a night apart from her husband since they had married. Now, with Dick in Manchester, she was very lonely, and, as it turned out, so was Dick.
One afternoon Margaret, who was playing in the front garden, looked up to see her daddy struggling down Glasbrook Road with his huge suitcase. He had lasted just three days. The separation from his family had been unbearable; he had decided to give up on Manchester and come back home.
Dick didn’t stop his efforts to get away from the city, but he now decided he would only leave London when he knew a firm job was waiting, and when his family could join him right away
There were others trying to leave too. In May the United States Embassy had advised all American citizens in Britain to return home as soon as possible. Those who couldn’t leave were encouraged to “seek accommodation in uncongested areas, as far as possible from metropolitan centers and points which might be considered strategical from a military point of view.” The next warning, in June, was much stronger, stating, “This may be the last opportunity for Americans to get home until after the war.”
All through the summer, British intelligence monitored the relentless German build-up. By late July 15 divisions of assault troops, more than 300,000 soldiers, were in the occupied ports facing England. By then, continuous German air attacks had cleared the Royal Navy from the English Channel. Britain’s defences were starting to thin.
The Germans chose Tuesday, August 13th to be “Eagle Day,” the start of the final campaign of all-out bombing and fighter sweeps that would drive the Royal Air Force from the skies over England, clearing the way to launch the invasion before the end of the summer.
On that day, the Luftwaffe hit southern England with more than 500 bombers and fighters. Thirty-nine didn’t return. The Royal Air Force appeared to win the day, losing just fifteen aircraft, but it was a hollow victory – five British fighter pilots were killed. The system the RAF had established could quickly repair or replace lost fighter planes, but it could not replace fighter pilots.
The weather the next day was bad for flying, thwarting German plans for widespread attacks. Even so, the Royal Air Force lost four more pilots.
On Thursday, August 15th, the Germans launched their largest and deadliest attacks yet. Almost 1,300 aircraft swept across the English Channel to attack airfields, railway lines, oil storage facilities and aircraft factories, and to draw the Royal Air Force into the air, where the German fighters could shoot them from the skies. In Plumstead Jack Nice sat with his son, Eddie, on their front step, watching the German fighters and bombers and the defending Spitfires and Hurricanes dancing in the skies, drawing intricate patterns of vapour trails, as they fought high over London and southeast England. By the end of the day, the Germans had shot down 34 Spitfires and Hurricanes, and 15 British pilots were dead or missing. The German losses had been much greater – 76 aircraft and 187 aircrew – but the Luftwaffe had more in reserve.
In the five days following Eagle Day, the Royal Air Force lost 68 pilots killed or missing and another 70 wounded and hospitalized, while in all of August to that date, the RAF received only 70 new replacements. By now, the RAF could field less than 800 Spitfires and Hurricanes. The Germans were still opposing them with almost 2,000 aircraft. This war of attrition could not continue much longer.
It was a glorious summer in London, but few were relaxing. The war was creeping closer and the omens of what awaited our family were growing stronger and more obvious every day.
A brother and sister, evacuated from London to Ashford, in Kent, where the Campbell children had been sent back in 1939, remembered watching “endless dogfights take place over our heads. We children would stand outside and watch them, enthralled, until we were driven in by an irate Home Guard man in his tin helmet . . . We were shot at by a low-flying German aircraft . . . when we were biking along an open road and had to take refuge in a ditch. The German pilot waved at us as he took off, and I remember being intensely amazed.”
The first bombs to hit London fell on Woolwich and Eltham in the early hours of the morning, on August 17th. A few incendiary bombs landed on the roof of Halford’s bicycle store at 81 Powis Street, but the Auxiliary Fire Service quickly extinguished the resulting fire. The other incendiaries only started grass fires and broke a few pavement stones.
It was almost a week later, on Saturday, August 24th, at 11:30 PM, that London suffered its first night raid – a widespread attack by three squadrons of bombers that hit docks, factories and residential areas in the east and southwest of the city, including the first bombs to fall on East Ham. Although no bombs hit Woolwich, people as far away as Plumstead and Eltham could clearly hear the anti-aircraft guns on Woolwich Common firing at the attackers as they flew overhead. It was a minor raid, with perhaps just 40 German bombers, but the anti-aircraft guns made everyone aware of the attack.
The next evening, London’s 13th air raid alert sounded, just ten days after the first. For four long hours, people listened to the anti-aircraft guns, the drone of aircraft engines and occasional bursts of machine gun fire. Then, just moments after the All Clear had finally sounded at 1.30 AM, as Dick Campbell and his family were climbing out of the Anderson shelter in their back garden; a lone bomber dropped its load of four incendiaries over Beckenham and Sydenham, three miles away. Two bombs fell into allotments and gardens on a housing estate, damaging 35 homes, but causing only minor casualties. The third crashed into the Columbia Ribbon and Carbon Company factory, setting it on fire, and damaged Baird’s TV Works, in the adjacent building. The last bomb smashed two more homes, bringing down whole walls.
There were actually few bombs falling, but air raid warnings were sounding every day now. This meant people were constantly on edge. On Tuesday, August 27th, an air raid warning quickly led to hysteria on Mile End Road in Stepney. “Everyone ran. No matter where, they just ran. Shelter! Quick! People running in all directions. People screaming.”
From then on, bombers attacked London every day, flying hit and run raids that targeted docks and factories, but often hit the residential streets and shopping districts clustered around them.
This steadily increasing violence added to the tension and sense of impending doom, but many Londoners were determined that their lives would go on. In East Ham, no threat of German action was going to interfere with twenty-two-year-old Florrie Hickford’s wedding.
Like most of the extended Hickford family, Florrie lived on Roman Road, where she shared a tiny row house with her parents, Albert and Mina, and her younger sister, Dorothy. She was working in a shop close to the docks and factories of Silvertown, north of the Thames. This is where she had met young Sid Wibrow, a butcher’s helper working in the shop next to hers. The war intruded on their romance when Sid received his call-up notice, but it didn’t stop the couple from seeing each other whenever they could. Now they would be married.
The wedding was set for the afternoon of Saturday, August 31st, at the parish church in East Ham. That day was a bad choice. Air raid alerts sounded at 8.25 AM, 10.40 AM and 1.00 PM. As the guests made their way to the church from Roman Road, from Silvertown and from across the river in Eltham, many wondered when a family gathering like this would happen again.
The last air raid warning interrupted preparations in the church. From there, the explosions of the bombs sounded far away, but for many in the wedding party, including bridesmaids Babs Campbell and Dorothy Hickford, it was hard to be calm. Most of them knew that the docks around Silvertown and North Woolwich were the most likely targets for these bombs, and they knew that Sid and his best man were traveling from Silvertown to get to the church.
Sid was behind schedule, still not finished dressing, when the bombs began falling around the docks very close to the old row house where he was living. Now he crouched under the stairs, destroying the creases in his freshly pressed uniform, and hoping the bombs would come no closer.
The attack didn’t last long, but when the all clear sounded, rubble and debris completely blocked Albert Road and Woolwich Manor Way, trapping Sid on the other side.
Tension was high in the church by the time Sid eventually came through the door. He was safe, work crews had cleared the roads enough for him to climb over the debris, the buses were running up to East Ham, and the war wasn’t going to stop this wedding today.
The ceremony began without the best man. He was still trapped behind the rubble somewhere, with the ring. Halfway through the service the Minister turned to the guests to ask, “Does anyone have a wedding ring?” Elsie Campbell sent hers up to the front and the ceremony carried on.
The Germans obliged Florrie by staying away until 5.45 PM, when the day’s fourth alert sounded. Florrie and Sid had already said goodbye to their family and friends when they heard the fifth alert at 9.45 PM. The sixth sounded at 11.20 PM. The couple spent their wedding night in a bomb shelter.
That afternoon, while Sid had been rushing to his wedding, brothers Eddie and John Nice and their friends were watching the action high in the skies over Woolwich. One vapour trail erupted into a ball of fire that began falling, right over their heads. As the object fell ominously closer, they could see it was a plane out of control, one wing shot off, flames shooting from the fuselage. Their eyes were wide open as they watched the plane spiral into the ground half a mile away, where it exploded in a ferocious roar, sending burning debris and ammunition shooting all over the neighbourhood.
Everyone in the area cheered when they learned it had been a German Me109 fighter, shot down by the RAF, but they didn’t realize that the Spitfire and Hurricane pilots they could see flying overhead were losing the air war.
The RAF’s fighter squadrons were still flying up to four sorties a day, but pilot losses were taking a terrible toll. Many squadrons were at just half strength; three-quarters had lost their commanding officers and were now led by junior pilots with much less experience than the dead men they were replacing. The intense air war was straining the intricate system defending Britain from the Luftwaffe. Radar stations had been bombed, opening up holes in the early warning system; telephone lines were down, so that critical information couldn’t get through to the fighter squadrons; hangars and ground equipment had been destroyed, so that it was more and more difficult to repair and maintain planes. Britain’s defenders were at the point of exhaustion.
By the first week of September, the Royal Air Force was facing collapse. Aircraft losses were now running at twice the rate at which factories could replace them and pilot losses had climbed to a rate of almost 20 a day. Another week of fighting this intense would destroy Britain’s air defenses and the Germans would have the air superiority they needed. They could then launch their invasion, unopposed from the air.
As the Royal Air Force crumbled, the government began preparing for the worst.
British Intelligence was now reporting an ominous picture of German activity across the Channel and the North Sea. On August 29th, aerial reconnaissance photographs revealed the build up of ships in ports that had been empty two weeks earlier. Over the next few days aerial reconnaissance revealed concentrations of ground attack squadrons opposite Kent and big increases in the number of invasion barges in ports along the coast of Holland. On Thursday, September 5th, the RAF began large-scale bombing attacks on the masses of ships and supply dumps in the French, Belgian and German ports.
That night, the Germans struck the area around Woolwich. They were probably targeting the docks, but hit Eltham hard as well. Bombs fell on the High Street, gutting the Woolworth’s department store, Simpson’s the home furnishers, and, to Dick Campbell’s great sorrow, ‘The Castle’ pub. Bombs also destroyed Barker’s Garage, set Well Hall station alight and demolished houses in Lynsted Gardens, killing three people. Other bombs fell seemingly randomly throughout southeast London, mostly causing light damage, but destroying a number of homes in Plumstead.
German bombers returned the next night, dropping bombs on Woolwich, Plumstead, Abbey Wood and Eltham, but this time Lewisham bore the brunt of their attention. Bombs fell on the houses along Engleheart Road, just ten minutes by bus from where the Campbells lived in Eltham.
That evening, while Londoners were cowering in their air raid shelters, German propaganda broadcasts were advising, “Hitler may at any hour give the order for invasion to begin.”
During the night, British patrols discovered 60 enemy vessels in the Channel off the coast of France. Commanders alerted all forces that invasion was imminent, perhaps within just 12 hours.
In reality the Germans were far from launching their invasion. They believed they still couldn’t establish air superiority over the beaches of southern England. In fact, it seemed to them that they were losing the Battle of Britain.
The Luftwaffe had by then lost a third of their aircraft, with almost half of their airmen killed, captured or wounded – a rate of loss proportionately far higher than they were inflicting on the British. German aircrews were flying sortie after sortie, deep into enemy territory, all through the daylight hours, day in, day out, with the seemingly certain prospect of eventually being shot down and captured, or even worse, to face a horrible death in the flaming wreckage of their aircraft. After three months of this, the Luftwaffe crews were exhausted and demoralized and close to the point of rebellion.
Despite their bravado and public pronouncements about the destruction of the Royal Air Force, the Germans were frustrated with their inability to inflict a fatal blow. It seemed to them that it didn’t matter how many sorties they flew, and how many aircraft they shot down, there were always more Spitfires and Hurricanes ready to face them again. And so, at the critical moment, when, unknown to them, victory in the Battle of Britain was within their grasp, Hitler ordered a new strategy, one he believed would break the back of the British people, destroying their will to resist and leaving them begging for a humiliating peace.
The story of that decision goes back to the first German night raid on London on August 24th. At the time the raid had seemed almost minor. Some even believed it was an accident. The scale and circumstance of the attack didn’t matter to Churchill – London had been indiscriminately bombed, and he was determined to respond. He ordered reprisal attacks on Berlin.
In an almost farcical effort, fewer than 100 outdated British bombers made the first attack of the war on the German capital on the night of August 28th. Only 29 of them found Berlin. They only slightly damaged two buildings – most of their bombs landed in open fields. The RAF followed up with more raids over the next week, eventually killing German civilians.
Hitler’s anger knew no bounds. At the height of his greatest triumph, with Poland, France, the Low Countries, Denmark and Norway all prostrate at his feet, he had been very publicly humiliated by the bombing of Germany’s capital city.
Until then Hitler had spared British cities from the kind of havoc wrought on Rotterdam and other towns on the Continent. The destruction of central Rotterdam by aerial bombing had led to widespread panic amongst Holland’s civil population, leading to the Dutch government’s collapse and capitulation.
Hitler decided he would now avenge the bombing of Berlin by applying the same tactics to London and other British cities. He would rain such fire and fury on the ordinary people of Britain that their will to resist would evaporate. He would bring the English to the point where they would be begging him to make peace.
On September 4th, he made a speech before a group of nurses and women social workers, all enthusiastic Nazi supporters. His audience was waiting to hear how he would respond to the British attacks. “The English are full of curiosity,” said Hitler. “They keep asking, ‘When is he coming?’ Don’t worry,” exclaimed Hitler. “He’s coming! He’s coming!”

He then gave the order for the destruction of London.

Tuesday 29 May 2012

We're all living longer . . . aren't we?


Mary Phippen slipped gently from life in 1909 at the age of 92. Born in 1816, just a few months after the Battle of Waterloo, she grew up by candle-light, never went to school and never knew a childhood without work. She went on to celebrate the coronation of Queen Victoria, wave goodbye to her husband Robert as he sailed to war in a three-decker sailing ship, marvel at the arrival of railways, photography, electricity and the first motor cars, and, through the dimming perceptions of creeping senility, greet the dawn of aviation.
My great great grandmother wasn’t alone in her longevity. Her father Richard Bartlett died of “natural decay” at 82 and her mother lived to be 87. Mary’s husband Robert Phippen died at 82, his parents died at 84 and 85, and his grandparents died at 79 and 85. Three quarters of my ancestors born in the 1700s and 1800s lived into their sixties and beyond, two-thirds lived past 70, and a quarter lived into their 80s.
How can that be? Aren’t we today living longer and healthier than at any time in the past? Aren’t we the beneficiaries of all the gifts of modern medical science?
Perhaps not.
The biggest change in our lives over the last 150 years has been the eradication of infant mortality. This isn’t the result of modern medical miracles, but is instead the outcome of enlightened public health policy that addresses issues as basic as access to clean drinking water and decent plumbing.

Clapham in 1808

Let’s begin by looking at just one year in the village of Clapham, a relatively well-to-do suburb of London on the south bank of the Thames in Surrey. The burial register for Clapham’s parish church (one of three churches in the village) provides a window on life (and death) 200 years ago (images of pages from the register are on line at ancestry.co.uk if you want to look for yourself).
One hundred and fourteen burials were recorded in the parish register in 1808. The youngest was Mary Thorowgood Keable, the daughter of a pastry cook, who was baptised immediately after she was born and died after just 24 hours. The oldest was Mary Clark, “a Spinster aged 90 years or more, from the Workhouse.”
Some of the more noteworthy burials included 26-year-old William Baker, who died accidentally “carrying a sack of coals for a wager;” 52-year-old William Westbrook, who “put an end to his existence in a fit of insanity;” and the man who was found “drowned in the right Honourable Lord Teignmouth’s pond, name unknown.”
The biggest cause of death was “Consumption,” known today as tuberculosis or TB, which struck a third of the working age men and women who died that year.
This parish register is sad reading, but saddest of all is the story of Clapham’s children.
More than half the burials recorded in 1808 were children under the age of ten. A third were under the age of two.
That year a severe epidemic of measles swept through London. In Clapham it took eleven babies and children. Six others died of convulsions. Three died of causes unknown.
Richard Prescott, aged 11 months, died of Whooping Cough. Jemima Cicely Williams, aged two years, died of “water on the brain.” Maria Daniels, aged four months, was taken by a “Complaint in the bowels.” John Blakely, aged five, died of “inflamation on the lungs.” And the list goes on.
Death was no respecter of class: Thomas Looker succumbed to whooping cough in the Poor House in January, aged one year nine months; Lea Guillebaud, son of the Reverend Peter Guillebaud and his wife Eliza Ann, was taken a few weeks later, aged 11 months,succumbing, bizarrely, to “cutting teeth.”
We’re led to believe that families were big 200 years ago, but perhaps families weren’t as big as we think. While it’s true that women gave birth to many children, this may only have ensured a decent chance that a few of their offspring would survive to become adults. I struggle to imagine the perpetual pall of mourning hanging over Clapham, with every household grieving the loss of so many young souls.
High infant mortality explains why the average age at death in Clapham in 1808 was just 28. People who survived past the age of ten could expect to die at an average age of 50. A third of them would live long enough to qualify as old age pensioners, except that there were no old age pensions in 1808.
It’s easy to believe that the story of our growing average life expectancy is one of great medical breakthroughs by pioneering researchers. That’s part of it of course, but a much smaller part than many of us believe. The biggest results have come from the more mundane focus on public health: clean drinking water, better sanitation and less crowded living conditions.

Life in Victorian London

Two hundred years ago most people shared communal public toilets, or privies, from which waste would be dumped into cesspits or street gutters or in London would flow through sewers directly into the River Thames. Drinking water was usually drawn from wells contaminated by seepage from the privies and cesspits and in London drinking water was drawn untreated directly from the river. Only the wealthy could afford to wash regularly, or to dress in clean clothes. It was common for clothes and hair to be infected with lice.
The vast majority of the population in London and other cities and towns lived in crowded tenements, whole families packed into tiny flea, roach and rodent-infected rooms with communal kitchens, where kitchens existed at all.
Henry Mayhew was a crusading journalist who wrote in the mid-19th century about the lives of the poor in London. He wrote of the lodging houses that catered to the poorest of London “with rooms so crammed with sleepers - [someone he interviewed] believed there were 30 where 12 would have been a proper number - that their breaths in the dead of night and in the unventilated chamber, rose . . . ‘in one foul, choking steam of stench’.” Here someone would scrape together “a handful of bugs” from the bedclothes and crush them under a candlestick. According to Mayhew it was common to get drunk each evening just so that it would be possible to sleep a full night through the stench and the bugs.
He wrote of a street were there were “dead decaying cats and fish, with offal, straw, and refuse scattered over the surface; at one end an entrance to a private yard was used as a urinal; in every part there were most offensive smell.” He described another area that had an “abundance of ordinary filth arising from the exposure of refuse, the surface of the court contained heaps of human excrement, there being only one privy to the whole court, and that not in a state to be publicly used . . .”
He described a creek that had become nothing more than an open sewer, draining directly into the Thames: “. . . the open doorless privies that hung over the water-side, and the dark streaks of filth down the walls, where the drains from each house discharged themselves into the ditch, were proofs indisputable as to how the pollution of the ditch occurred . . . In [the water] floated large masses of rotting weed, and against the posts of the bridges were swollen carcasses of dead animals, ready to burst with the gases of putrefaction. Along its shores were heaps of indescribable filth . . .”
On one street Mayhew came across the home of a barber. “. . . When the scarlet fever was raging in the neighbourhood, the barber who was living here suffered fearfully from it, and no sooner did the man get well of this than he was seized with typhus, and scarcely had he recovered from the first attack of that, than he was struck down a second time with the same terrible disease. Since then he has lost his child from cholera, and at this moment his wife is in the workhouse suffering from the same affliction. The only wonder was that they are not all dead; for as the barber sat at his meals in his small shop, if he put his hand against the wall behind him, it would be covered with the soil of his neighbour’s privy, sopping through the wall.”
Is it any wonder that people died in London at an early age? These living conditions were ideal for any number of infectious diseases, including smallpox, tuberculosis, scarlet fever, whooping cough, diphtheria, dysentery, cholera and measles. Their victims, especially infants and children, were already sickly and malnourished, ready to be taken.
And taken they were. England in 1841 had a population of about 16 million. Between 1838 and 1848 some 160,000 deaths were attributed to typhus. Measles and whooping cough claimed 50,000 between 1838 and 1840. Cholera took 52,000 in 1832, another 50,000 in 1848 and 36,000 in 1853 and 1854. 1848 was an especially bad year: the country was ravaged not only by typhus and cholera, but also by dysentery and influenza which alone took another 13,000. The number of deaths caused by consumption was horrific - perhaps up to a quarter of all deaths in England in the 1840s.

Smallpox and Public Health Policy

Of all these diseases, smallpox was perhaps the most widespread and most dreaded. It was also the first to be conquered.
It’s likely that every person living in England in the 1700s was exposed to smallpox at some point in his or her life and it was the cause of death for one in five. Passed from a victim’s respiratory tract, the smallpox virus was transmitted to others through a victim’s clothing, through corpses and through the air, often wafting through every lane and alley in whole villages and neighbourhoods.
After a 12-day incubation period, patients first noticed a high temperature, headaches and sometimes vomiting. Then a rash would appear, first on the face and then on the rest of the body. The rash would turn into pustules which gave off a stinking odour.
Some victims would pass away peacefully. Others would die in agony, unable to drink or eat, retching blood from their lungs.
Often survivors were left weakened, unable to fend off other diseases. Some were blinded; others found their faces horribly disfigured; and most survivors were scarred for life.
My great, great, great grandfather George Hickford’s second wife Mary passed away in 1839 in Ashen, Essex. The parish register records that she “died of smallpox sometime between 3 and 4-o-clock on Sunday, June 16; buried shortly after midnight; service given at 10:00 am same day.” This kind of haste was common then - corpses had to be buried quickly and kept from others in the community.
In 1700 as many as one in five of all deaths were caused by smallpox, but by the beginning of the 19th century, this horrible disease was starting to be controlled. Inoculation, the practise of developing immunity by exposing someone to a mild form of the disease (by opening a vein and introducing puss directly into the blood), had been discovered in the Middle East and was brought to England early in the 18th century. It was widespread by the 1750s. Then, the turn of the century saw the introduction of inoculation with cowpox, or vaccination as it became known.
At first, only the wealthy were inoculated, but eventually the authorities realised the benefits of inoculating the poor as well and began to pay for the introduction of the practise in the poorest neighbourhoods throughout the country and then, in the middle of the 19th century, to legislate mandatory vaccination for everyone. This was the first example of a disciplined public health policy, and although occasional outbreaks continued until as late as 1881, it was a success. By the 1850s, in the rural health district of Halstead, Essex (which included the village of Toppesfield, where my ancestor Edward Nice and his family lived), less than one half of one percent of all deaths were attributed to smallpox. By the 1880s there were no smallpox cases reported at all.
The 19th century saw a steady progression of other public health initiatives.
The first public health act was passed in 1848. Others followed in 1872 and 1875.
The “Great Stink” of 1858, when the stench of untreated human waste in the Thames was so strong that it prevented work in the courts and in the House of Commons, prompted the authorities to finally deal with the raw sewage that was ending up in the river. Over the following ten years modern sewers and pumping stations were constructed to carry waste down river past the city.
At the same time water distribution companies started taking advantage of the availability of steam engines to pump cleaner drinking and washing water from further upstream on the Thames into most areas of London. Soap was by then also becoming much cheaper and more readily available. 
The public health act of 1875 governed water supply and sewage, including the construction of new toilets. Henceforth these had to have at least one outside wall with a window, their own water supply and a separate pipe leading to a sewer. That year the Artisans and Labourers Dwellings Act empowered local authorities to demolish housing with inadequate drainage or sewage disposal facilities.

The Impact on Woolwich

Slowly these measures and others began to change the quality of life for people living in England, with a direct affect on their life expectancy. Nowhere is this more apparent than in Woolwich. Surrounding the Royal Docks, the Royal Arsenal and a large army barracks, this London neighbourhood grew rapidly in the second half of the 19th century.
Many of my ancestors moved to Woolwich at that time: John Street and his family in 1861, Harry Berryman and his family in 1889, Alfred Nice and his brother and sister and their families in the 1890s and Richard Campbell and his son in 1903.
An analysis of records published by Free BMD at freebmd.org.uk shows that in 1869 the average age at death in Woolwich was 25 and the median age (the age below which half of all deaths occurred) was just 10. Almost 38% of all deaths in the neighbourhood were children under the age of two and only a quarter of those who survived childhood could expect to live to age 65 or beyond. These statistics are not much different from those of the Clapham of sixty years earlier, where the average age at death was 24 and the median age was six, but where 32% of adults could expect to pass 65.
By contrast, in the Halstead district in 1867 the average age at death was 38 and the median age was 35, and amongst those who survived childhood almost half could expect to live past 65. The countryside really was healthier in those days.
Jump forward to 1907 and the picture has changed for the better. That year the average age at death in Woolwich was 32 and the median age was 27. Amongst those who survived childhood almost 40% could expect to live past 65. This was a big change in 40 years, but the contrast with Halstead had grown even greater. There, the average age at death had increased to 50 and the median age was 60. Some 60% of all adults could expect to live past 65.
After that, though, Woolwich’s statistics improve dramatically and the gap with Halstead narrows. By 1927 the average age at death in Woolwich was 53, compared to 65 in Halstead, and the median age was 62 compared to 70 (yes, by 1927 half of all people who died in Halstead died past the age of 70!). By 1947 the average age at death in Woolwich had leaped to 64 and the median age was 69. In Halstead the comparable numbers were 69 and 73 respectively. The biggest factor driving these numbers was the drop in infant mortality, from 38% in 1869 to just 5% in 1947.
These numbers are astounding. In Woolwich between 1869 and 1947 the median age of death increased from ten years to 69. And yet this was in an era before the introduction of universal health care, before the widespread use of antibiotics and before the introduction of MRIs, CatScans, ultrasounds, defibrillators, pacemakers, lung transplants, open heart surgery and every other modern medical miracle.
In the 78 years between 1869 and 1947 the average age at death in Woolwich increased from 25 to 64. In the 65 years since 1947 the average age at death in Woolwich has only increased to 72. So much for modern medicine!

The Impact on My Family

The decline in infant mortality meant that women no longer needed to bear a dozen or more children just to ensure that some would survive to become adults. Average family size fell significantly after 1900, which meant that each family had more money for food,medicine and clothing for their children, who grew up healthier as a result.
This can be seen in my family. John and Sarah Brand lived in Saffron Walden in Essex. They were married in 1818 and went on to have five children. Young Sarah was 11 weeks old when she died in 1819; George was four when he died in 1832; Esther was seven when she died in 1839. Henry lived to age 25 before he died in of consumption in 1845. By then, consumption had already taken John. Only Samuel, my great, great grandfather, lived long enough to marry and have children.
Samuel Brand married Mary Ann Roberts in 1850 and went on to have five children before Mary Ann died of consumption in 1863. John died of consumption at the age of seven in 1866. Evelyn died at 15 in 1869. Emma died a month before Evelyn a the age of 18. Two other children, Sarah and Ellen (my great grandmother) lived on into old age.
Ellen Brand married Freddie Hickford in 1880 and went on to have 11 children between 1881 and 1905. Only four died before marrying. Ellen’s youngest daughter, Elsie, my grandmother, married Dick Campbell in 1927. They had only three children who all survived to have families of their own.
Similar stories can be seen in every branch of my family. In most cases my ancestors who survived childhood went on to live very long lives.
Perhaps the most ironic story I can tell is of Lucy Chuter’s two families. I’ve written before about how one was a prosperous middle class family of doctors and the other was a working class family of soldiers, night watchmen and the like. In the family of doctors the average age at death of Lucy’s six grandchildren was just 60. In the other family Lucy’s six grandchildren died at an average age of 81!