Under
the title IT CAN NOW BE TOLD Enid Chadwick revealed in 1945 what might
have happened had the Germans invaded ... |
|
|
The Commandant for our area, who is a most excellent speaker and can make even anti-gas lectures inspiring, revealed some of the secrets which had been kept from us while we plodded on with our splints and triangular bandages – not to speak of the intricacies of roller bandaging. She told us that what was generally spoken of in those two years as the “possibility of invasion” was called by those in command the “imminent probability of invasion”. It was expected
that the Germans would make a bridgehead of north-west Norfolk, landing
Thus Walsingham was planned to be evacuated and handed over to the enemy – indeed, it would have been in the very front line of attack. (One evening the command for these units to move south of the road actually came through; it was not an exercise.) The Home Guard only would be left to fight a delaying action, and the little village First Aid Points would be the sole means of rendering comfort to the wounded. That was why, we were told, we were suddenly plunged into a course of Home Nursing; and that was why our leaders were issued with hypodermic syringes, which must inevitably have been needed with numbers of wounded coming in and no doctors available. The military kept up-to-date records of all the Points and those who manned them. We were not needed, but we were no more “useless” than the guns which bristled threateningly along our beaches. |