logo
#

Latest news with #Tostevin

'I wasn't evacuated because I was blind'
'I wasn't evacuated because I was blind'

BBC News

time06-05-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

'I wasn't evacuated because I was blind'

A Guernsey man who wasn't able to evacuate during the German Occupation due to being blind has shared his memories of the Campbell was seven when World War Two started, and when his family evacuated to England, his mother was advised to leave him in the care of the Guernsey Blind Association (GBA).He had lost his sight at one-year-old, and had been looked after by the GBA at Candie Villa since Campbell says he and the one other blind child at Candie Villa, Neville Tostevin, were "like brothers" until Mr Tostevin's passing in 2016. He said he remembers clearly the day his mother, Doris, came to Candie Villa with plans to take him to England along with his older brother, Colin, and baby sister, June. His father, an Englishman, had been called up to the Army the year said Miss Richards and Miss Marrs, the "two maiden ladies and kingpins" of the GBA, thought it would be "too much" for his mother to manage a blind child as well as two other mother was told he would be safe on the island but would be sent to her with an escort "if there was any trouble".He didn't see her again until 1946 when she came to Guernsey for a short said: "It was a general view held that working class parents would have difficulty bringing up blind children so I had got used to being parted from my mother and father over the years, from babyhood."He remained under the care of the GBA until he went to boarding school in England in 1948 when he was 16. 'Started dropping bombs' Mr Campbell's childhood was spent learning geography, arithmetic, braille and most of all, music, with Mr Tostevin, who was partially sighted and would read encloypedia entries and newspaper weather reports to Campbell recalled the friends playing together in Cambridge Park with a ball with a bell inside it on Friday 28 June 1940, when "the German planes which had been taking a look at the islands for a couple of days started dropping bombs"."I didn't understand about the machine gunning and the bombing, but I heard these funny rattling noises and I thought 'goodness there's something wrong with his engine'", Michael said."And then when the bombs were dropped, I thought 'oh thank goodness it didn't fall on this house', but of course it was the Germans bombing the harbour."Mr Campbell remembered Miss Marrs reading from the local paper that the Germans were now in control of the island."I have very vivid memories of aeroplanes going over which was the German troops landing, bringing these huge troop carriers."Miss Marrs told us that some of the planes were so low that she could see the man at the controls. "I don't know if that's true. She had a great feeling for a sort of drama." Food parcels and messages Mr Campbell said the main thing that worried the boys during the occupation was a shortage of food, and the 'lowest times' were during three weeks in 1945 when they had no flour to make recalled receiving Red Cross parcels from Canada and New Zealand at the end of 1944."I can remember the exciting day we went to fetch those - it was New Year's Eve 1944, a Sunday - and they even opened up Fisher's Corner Shop for us to collect them."There were tins of corned beef, boxes of cheese, chocolate, ham, and even some tea."We used to have blackberry or carrot tea, and parnsip coffee, but it was the real thing in these Red Cross parcels."Mr Campbell said he tried a cup of tea with sugar that New Year's Eve, but that he had become so used to drinking it without sugar that "from that day to this, I've never had sugar in my tea." He received a Red Cross message from his mother about once a one letter, his mother wrote "braille books coming soon!"Mr Campbell said he's always wondered if it was a coded message saying the war was ending soon, because no braille books remembers the exact wording of the first message he received from her: "Fondest love from all. Hoping you and all are well."It's always stuck in my mind, that one."After school, Mr Campbell went to the Royal College of Music and worked as a teacher before was also married for many years before his wife passed away in 2021, and lives in Worcester.

Man recalls 'horror occasions' from Guernsey's WW2 occupation
Man recalls 'horror occasions' from Guernsey's WW2 occupation

BBC News

time02-05-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Man recalls 'horror occasions' from Guernsey's WW2 occupation

A man from Guernsey has shared some of his most frightening memories of experiencing the German Occupation of the island during World War Tostevin, now 86, was six years old when the island was liberated on 9 May said he remembered "horror occasions" encountering forced workers who came begging for food, while he was also told not to tell the Germans Tostevin said the firing of a "massive gun" broke the windows of his house and planes called "moaners" would fly overhead. 'They'll shoot me' He said he remembered one labourer coming to his family home and asking his father for Tostevin said: "This man came in rags with the sacking on his feet."He was a Frenchman, I remember it to this day and I felt sick after seeing him come in looking so bedraggled and so ill-looking. "To see him like that, it frightened me, they were those horror occasions really when you saw these things."On one occasion he saw the man in an old pumping shed "with a crystal set" who said "don't tell anyone that I'm here because they'll shoot me".Mr Tostevin said: "We never divulged anything that was said in our home, because of being caught out."He has shared his experiences as part of the Island Memories project records islanders' memories for future generations. Mr Tostevin's family lived in Torteval and were grape 86-year-old still lives in the same house and still grows some of his family's grapes in his said: "There was a plane that used to fly around every single night and it had the droning sound and they called it a moaner."In the evening they'd say 'oh there's the moaner' and we were frightened of the moaner."Another time I was in the field next door, again very small, and there was a German plane flying over and the pilot was looking down at me and I was very scared because I thought, what's he going to do to me?"Now I've thought since, maybe he was saying to himself I've got a son of that age, who knows."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store