Jean Taylor’s Story
The tears and cheers
Jean Taylor was 18 when the war ended. Born and bred in Coventry, she remembers the tears and the cheers that came with VE Day in Holbrooks.
“I was in the living room, my mother was in the kitchen and I said ‘mum, come, come, there’s going to be an announcement.’ My mother was washing up and reluctantly came in and when she heard the news, her eyes filled with tears. At last, something was going to happen.
“I think she’d got her own preparations, what she would do with us kids, if it ever came to the invasion. They weren’t going to get her kids.
“There was a lot going on; people rushing around (shouting) ‘it’s over!’. I think for a long time, people just couldn’t take it in. We’d been waiting such a long time to hear that, and when it finally happens, you wonder if you’d imagined it.â€
And the next day, it was time for a street party on Masser Road.
“The street party was a big deal. This was laying out the cloth, putting up home-made bunting, people rushing about trying to find enough, because there were a lot of kids.
“You wondered how it all happened. I think the women had been putting stuff on one side, hoping against hope, that one day it would happen.
“Mum made some fairy cakes and I don’t know how she did it, but she managed to put a bit of icing on the top, so they looked a bit different. And she made some sandwiches with sardines, but she disguised it with tomato sauce so it looked a bit like salmon!
“One or two of the ladies had made larger cakes, without eggs, without sugar, I don’t know really what went in to them, but people were just so pleased to have something. It really was special.â€
And while there was a lot of celebration and cheering, there were also thoughts about those who were still fighting in the Far East.
“Kids whose dads were away, you know, ‘dad’s coming home now’. But it wasn’t that way, especially if they were out in Burma or somewhere, the war wasn’t over for them.â€
The next day, Jean was back at her desk in the typing pool at the Riley car factory in the city.
“Everybody said ‘it’s happened, it’s finally happened’ and everybody was so relieved, I think was the overwhelming emotion relief; thank God, now we can get on with life.
“But it didn’t really change very much; we still had rationing, we were still short of money, but you had a hope in your heart that it would get better.
“Took a long time, but it would get better.â€
Image: Jean Taylor
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VE Day
Memories of VE Day celebrations from ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio Coventry and Warwickshire listeners.
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