Wiki User
∙ 14y agoThis question is confusing because it was the Ministry of Health that put the evacuations in place. They liked protecting the children and some adults by sending them to the countryside or smaller towns. They did have problems with the evacuation but overall it went as well as things could go with millions involved in the evacuation.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoNo, it was most commonly just referred to as the Evacuation, but also Operation Pied Piper. The Blitz referred solely to the sustained Bombing of British cities during the Battle of Britain.
Evacuation took place during the first months of World War Two. Evacuation was a potentially traumatic occurrence and the government tried to lessen its impact by issuing advice to all of those impacted by evacuation. This advice was delivered to what the government referred to as "evacuable" areas - the advice is clearly biased towards the government's viewpoint - that evacuation was for the best and pushed home hard the potential consequences of what might happen if children were not evacuated from danger areas.The evacuation of Britain's cities at the start of World War Two was the biggest and most concentrated mass movement of people in Britain's history. In the first four days of September 1939, nearly 3,000,000 people were transported from towns and cities in danger from enemy bombers to places of safety in the countryside.•Schoolchildren (827,000) and their teachers•Mothers with children under five (524,000)•Pregnant women (12,000)•Some disabled peopleWhere were the children taken to?The children were not evacuated to any city at all. They were evacuated to smaller towns and villages in the countryside. Some children were sent to stay with relatives outside in the countryside, but others were sent to live with complete strangers.
In Britain in World War 2 children (and in the case of babies, also the mothers) were sent from large cities to rural areas to get them away from bombing. This process was called evacuation.
No - the evacuation at Dunkirk happened late May/early June 1940. The US didn't become involved in World War II until December 1941
Umm. I don’t know but I do know how to spell organised
i think the 31st of august
aids
Evacuation in Britain during World War 2 took place primarily in September 1939, just after the war started. This involved the evacuation of children, pregnant women, and disabled individuals from cities to rural areas to keep them safe from bombing raids.
Britain had a coalition government during World War 2
No, it was most commonly just referred to as the Evacuation, but also Operation Pied Piper. The Blitz referred solely to the sustained Bombing of British cities during the Battle of Britain.
Evacuation was introduced by the government to move people out of dangerous situations to safer places.Evacuation was introduced by the government to move people out of dangerous situations to safer places.
Evacuation took place during the first months of World War Two. Evacuation was a potentially traumatic occurrence and the government tried to lessen its impact by issuing advice to all of those impacted by evacuation. This advice was delivered to what the government referred to as "evacuable" areas - the advice is clearly biased towards the government's viewpoint - that evacuation was for the best and pushed home hard the potential consequences of what might happen if children were not evacuated from danger areas.The evacuation of Britain's cities at the start of World War Two was the biggest and most concentrated mass movement of people in Britain's history. In the first four days of September 1939, nearly 3,000,000 people were transported from towns and cities in danger from enemy bombers to places of safety in the countryside.•Schoolchildren (827,000) and their teachers•Mothers with children under five (524,000)•Pregnant women (12,000)•Some disabled peopleWhere were the children taken to?The children were not evacuated to any city at all. They were evacuated to smaller towns and villages in the countryside. Some children were sent to stay with relatives outside in the countryside, but others were sent to live with complete strangers.
A coalition government
The Japanese American Evacuation Claims Act
In Britain in World War 2 children (and in the case of babies, also the mothers) were sent from large cities to rural areas to get them away from bombing. This process was called evacuation.
Great Britain
France capitulates after the Dunkirk evacuation .