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Story by Mrs Dorothy Wall
My parents were licensees of the Railway Hotel in Yate during the
War and of course they were very busy because Parnalls had two lunch
hours, one for the aircraft factory workers and one for the
administrative workers. Parnalls had a canteen run by a gentleman
who had been a catering officer for P&O cruise lines. Even so, there
was only 45 minutes for the workers lunch break. so the hotel bar
became very busy and there was also a market every week.
We had just closed, it must have been about 2 o'clock. The siren
went off and immediately, before it had stopped, the bombs were
dropping. It was a single aircraft. Some bombs dropped on the
factory, but some dropped on a gunnery school which probably tested
the gun turrets, a number of them were killed during the air-raid.
In that first raid a number of factory workers were killed.
The German aircraft came in so low that you could see the pilot, a
large part of the factory was very badly damaged so they evacuated
some departments and then scattered them where they could.
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The cider factory at Melksham was a dispersal point, one in the
Keynsham area, Bath, Wickwar and also in Bristol. Coaches would pick
the workers up every evening from Yate and take them to the
different premises for the nightshifts and also dayshifts. Parts of
the factory were still usable, the factory made gun turrets for
bomber aircraft. On the next payday Parnalls set up a couple of
tables in the car park and paid the wages from there.
The second time Parnalls was bombed, it was again by a lone plane,
but by this time most of the production was elsewhere. The plane
only had to follow the railway line to find the factory, which lay
alongside the line at Yate. There were women working on the
Production line at Parnalls all through the war.
Until the Second Front was opened there were always three or four
long Red Cross carragies waiting in the siding at Yate until they
were required.
Yate also had an engineering factory called Newmans and they made
shell casings there; and there were women working there too,
although it was really far too heavy work for them.
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