World War Two
Ronald Leedham: Dogfight
Ronald Leedham was born in 1929 in India. His family moved back to England in 1931after Ronald contracted Polio. Ronald spent some years in Hospital as a young child after contracting Diptheria. When he was six he returned home to Catford for a short while to live with his father, eventually ending up living in ‘homes for crippled children’ run by the Shaftesbury Society, until he was sixteen.
More from
Ronald Leedham
- War starts
- A Miserable Time
- Parlour Songs
- Incendiaries in the park
- Cricket at Sevenoaks
- No talking
- Lead Soldiers
- Boys and girls together
- Shut Away and Tipped Out
- Shelter
- Shame
- The Walk to Church on Sunday
- Greyness
- The Glow over London
- Visiting every six weeks
- Suitcases
- Buzz Bombs and Doodlebugs
- Certificates
- Oliver Twist
- I Knew Nothing About Life
- ‘Mummy coming’
- Geography
- Oliver Twist and donk
- Beatings
- Awful Sundays
- Difficult subject
- Explosives
- Sheltering in the Church
- Mum
- Home
- Visits
Ron describes arriving at his second wartime school.
Transcript
When I arrived at Sevenoaks, there was an air raid on, the warning had gone when we were leaving Coney Hill and it was about 20 miles to Sevenoaks, went there in the school bus It wasn’t an air raid so much, as a dogfight going on overhead and I can remember seeing the boys, they had benches in the playground and as we drove up, there were these boys lying back watching, watching the dogfight above them and other kids lying around, sort of standing around. Nobody took cover, nobody took cover at all, it was just, it had happened before, do it again, you know the sort of thing. Strange.Explore more
Explore stories by theme or view the timeline of significant events in education for disabled people