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tags: Family

One event…

August 5th, 1996, by Rich.

This poem was written by my grandfather (Harry Breeze MBE DFC) for my Grandmother (Edna Doretta Breeze, nee Fearon) on the occasion of their 58th wedding anniversary.

It was something of a tradition that my grandfather would write a poem and make a card for christmas, birthdays and anniversaries, and in fact, any occasion he could thinkof. Often the cards and poems would have a whimsical subject matter, this one however, captures something quite special.

It concerns the night of March 12-13 1941. At the time, Harry and Edna were in their mid to late 20’s, and Lesley (my mum), was still not 2 years old. They lived at 58 Northbrook Road, Wallasey, which is a few hundred yards away from Birkenhead Docks. Also mentioned are my great grandparents Harry Breeze (1889-1955) and Alice Breeze (nee Hurst, 1889-1964) who lived at 9 Poulton Road (their children were Harry, Jack and Len Breeze).

One event from our fifty eight years of being married

My anniversary poem this year
Got longer than I was intending.
It kept going on, and on, and on
I couldn’t get to an ending

So I started again on one single hap’ning
And wrote about that instead.
One never to be forgotten event,
From the fifty eight years we’ve been wed.

Our house, and all our block of six, were destroyed
In the March 1941 blitz.
The raid was already in progress and
There’d been several direct hits.

I’d been out doing firewatch, there being
Incendiary bombs everywhere
You were guarding Lesley in our
Shelter under the stair.

I’d just walked to see how you were,
When we felt a gigantic WHOOSH,
We didn’t hear an explosion, only
This awful whispering WHOOSH.

Then the rumble of houses tumbling down
In clouds of dust and rubble.
We realised we were still alive,
But in a load of trouble.

"Get the pram." I remember you called,
But that could not be seen.
Just holes and open spaces
where doors and Windows had been.

We managed to scramble outside somehow
You and Lesley and me.
The sounds we heard meant someone was buried
And we knew who that might be.

"Better hang on with Lesley, Love,
Out here there’s work to do."
I joined the scramble to get Mrs. Shone,
And her baby was rescued too.

The Sylvesters had gone away for the night.
Other neighbours were still around.
They were still there when we saw them later,
Laid out under sheets on the ground.

We started to make our way to Dad’s.
Bombs were still whistling down,
Crumping in sticks of six and spreading
A red glow all around.

A shock on reaching Poulton Road.
Was our escape plan out of control?
A bloody great crater all over the road
Tramlines sticking out of the hole.

Better divert round Halleville Road,
It’s the only chance we’ve got.
That’s when wardens came out of their shelter
shouting "Get under cover you lot."

A bareheaded warden approached us
And this is perfectly true.
Mum just turned and faced him and said
"Put your helmet on, you."

As we struggled on over rubble and glass,
A new fear we tried to dispel.
What if we did reach Dad’s house,
Would they have been bombed out, as well?

Concerned about spaces between rows of houses,
Rubble on the roadway spread
Where others had lost their homes too.
We just hoped that none were dead.

Dad’s house was still there, when we reached it
Mum and Dad were safe within.
They got a shock when they saw us,
And the awful state we were in.

We said all our windows were broken,
Dad said "I’m no silly ass.
You don’t get covered in soot and plaster
From a bit of broken glass".

And that was the end of an episode.
We still had our family of three
To live through more bloody air raids,
Edna and Lesley and me.

The raids continued, randomly spaced,
The eight night Blitz, as well,
No mains water, gas or electric for weeks
It was like we were living in hell.

Do you ever think what you went through,
A trusting child in your care.
The mental stress the physical strain,
And all without turning a hair.

Your seal of success with marriage and kids
Comes from taking trouble in your stride.
That’s why we look back on fifty eight years
With happiness and pride.

8 Responses to “One event…”

  1. 1
    Lesley Says:

    Until I read this poem, when Dad wrote it, I had always believed that all the other neighbours were ‘out in the street’ watching what was going on.

    It was only all those years later, that I learnt from this poem that they were in fact all dead. It really brought home the reality of how very lucky we were to survive.

    BTW, Mrs Shone named her second daughter ‘Lesley’ as a ‘Thank You’ to Dad. The first daughter who was my age(2) was Sandra.

  2. 2
    Rich Says:

    I notice that on friendsreunited there’s a Lesley Shone with links to the Wirral, but I don’t have an account that I can contact her on to ask if she recognizes the story. I’m sure Internet will do it’s thing, and everyone googles their own name eventually.

  3. 3
    Trackback from: gowen.org » Blog Archive » Living on borrowed time
  4. 4
    Rich Says:

    I’m trying to work out what the route from 58 Northbrook Road to 9 Poulton Road might have been. I know where 58 Northbrook road was, because I’ve been there, and the fact that it was never rebuilt helps; but I’m not sure about the location of 9 Poulton Road.

    The computer tells me it’s east of Northbrook, but a diversion up Halville Road would head west, then north; entirely the other direction. This is feasible, but… I need to know where Number 9 is to be sure.

    See route version 1. Or in Google Earth.

    In any locals can help, please speak up!

  5. 5
    Lesley Says:

    By the time of the blitz, Nana & Pop had moved from Poulton Road to 18 Hillcroft Road…ie in the other direction.

    Pop had built an Anderson shelter in the back, with a garden on top (’Dig for Victory’ was the slogan of the day).

    After six months living with them, we moved into 32 Rufford Rd, about 150 yards down the road…I lived even closer to my grandparents than you did to yours.

    After Nana died, Len & Prim moved into her house and you & I visited them there the year we camped in North Wales

  6. 6
    Lesley Says:

    Now then…. You were exactly correct in pinpointing No.9 Poulton Rd. However, Mum & Dad did, in fact turn LEFT along Poulton Rd when the left what was left of Northbrook Rd.

    The reason they had to divert along Halville Rd was probably because there was a huge crater in Poulton Rd just past it, totally blocking the way. Mum told me that the long-buried former tramlines were left sticking up into the sky, looking very gaunt and frightening. It was here too that Mum saw the warden without his hat on and reprimanded him.

    When they got to Pop’s house, they told him that their windows had blown in….. understatement or what? I don’t think they had much on in the way of clothes and were cut to pieces and very black.

    Dave & I went there last year when we went to visit Joan Fearon in Liverpool. I always felt sad that they didn’t rebuild my first home. It is a part of the schoolyard now.

    Anyway, avoid diverting along Halville Rd and continue along Poulton Rd until you come to Hillcroft Rd. Rufford Rd (where we eventually moved to and lived until 1950) is a square. Nana & Pop lived on the bottom RH corner of that square.

    Very close by are the allotments where I bought flowers for Mum when my brother & sister were born after the war

  7. 7
    Lesley Says:

    Oh dear… call myself a navigator??? They turned right onto Poulton Rd…. i was looking at it upside down!

  8. 8
    Lesley Says:

    Oh yes, and the bombed site where I saw my first bonfire was between Sham St , Poulton Rd and Broughton Rd. I believe new houses were built there in the late 1940s.

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