Book description
It is the third of September 1939. It is just after half past
eleven in the morning. I am fifteen years and sixteen days old. The
radiogram at my home, the Woodman Hotel in Clent, has just been
switched off, the silence resonates around the room, and a deathly
hush has fallen. The Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, has declared
that, despite the best efforts of the politicians of the day to secure
'peace in our time', the inevitable has befallen us; despite pledges
to the contrary, Germany has invaded Poland, Hitler has ignored
requests to back down and so, therefore, 'Britain is now at war with
Germany'. Minutes after the broadcast ends, my Father, Sidney Wheeler,
goes quietly up to his room where he methodically loads three bullets
into his First World War revolver.' This is the true story of a
fifteen-year-old girl's experience of the Second World War, based
around her parent's hotel in a sleepy Worcestershire village. As war
is declared, her father prepares three bullets for the invasion. He
will shoot the family and himself when the Germans come. In their
village, local Germans are imprisoned (guilty or not). The blackout is
immediate and has tragic consequences. There is a court case over an
alleged poker game. An abortion nearly results in tragedy. Handsome
young airmen fly low over the hotel. Pamela has a premonition of
death. The business fails. An air raid very nearly kills them all. She
is called up first to factory work and then to the Land Army. She
marries by special licence. As the war comes to an end she is living
at home with her parents and a small baby, at which point she is just
twenty-one years of age. Amusing and entertaining, surprising and
often moving, Pamela's account vividly captures one family's life on
the home front in Worcestershire.
Cherryl Vines is 86-year-old Pamela Edith Wheeler's daughter and has
spent some of her retirement compiling her mother's fascinating war
memories.