Anderson shelter used in St Thomas

Photo:Anderson shelter used in St Thomas

Anderson shelter used in St Thomas

From the collections at RAMM, Accession No. 92/1991

A little history of the Anderson shelter
By Sarah, Curator of West Exe

This Anderson shelter comes from Woodville Road,St Thomas. By the time of the Blitz, 2.25 million houses had one in their garden. Each one was made up of fourteen sheets of corrugated steel. They were bolted together to form a hut, placed in a hole in the ground and covered with earth. They were strong enough to protect four to six people from anything but a direct hit.

Anderson shelters were first issued in 1938 at a cost of £7 (free to poorer homes). The Home Secretary John Anderson came up with the idea, but they are named after their designer Dr David Anderson.

After the war the shelter in Woodville Road was used as a garden shed until 1991 when it was passed to the museum.

This page was added by Sarah, Curator of West Exe on 19/01/2008.

Comments/reviews:

Mr Maurice Melhuish remembers his family's anderson shelter in Mildmay Close which flooded regularly. Father would be the one to jump in first but we would all go in: mother, father, granny and all. We would have to stay for no more than an hour and a half or two hours. When there was a raid, there was a siren that went up-and-down and there was one long siren to tell you to when it was safe to come out.  My father was a fire warden so he would walk around outside with the other fire wardens.

By Community Editor
On 16/02/2008

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