Rationing In Britain

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  • čas přidán 7. 01. 2010
  • COI 155
    An American commentator looks at the effects of rationing on the people of England in 1944.
    The film presents a 'typical' family of 4 (housewife, engine-driver husband, factory-working daughter, schoolboy son) to illustrate the basic rationing system, the workings of 'point' systems and other restrictions, and the difficulties the average family faced when eating 'on the ration'.
    Explore IWM's film collection: film.iwmcollections.org.uk

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @JoyceHopewell
    @JoyceHopewell Před 13 lety +2043

    I've been searching for this film for years as my dad is the butcher serving Mrs. Green in the shop. I saw the clip once on a BBC programme years ago & my dad just happened to be watching at the same time. He'd often told me about the information film he'd taken part in during the war but had never seen it, so it was a treat for us both the see it together, quite unexpectedly on on TV. In the war he worked as a butcher by day and ARP Warden by night.

    • @elizabethgadd8540
      @elizabethgadd8540 Před 6 lety +157

      Hi Joyce My Grandfather was Mr Green. He was Moore Marriott, he was in a lot of movies. :)

    • @montyzumazoom1337
      @montyzumazoom1337 Před 4 lety +29

      That’s brilliant! A good film.

    • @montyzumazoom1337
      @montyzumazoom1337 Před 4 lety +24

      Elizabeth Gadd Still enjoy seeing him in the Will Hay films as Harbottle😂😂😂

    • @peteacher52
      @peteacher52 Před 4 lety +37

      I know that "Dad's Army" was a gentle parody of the extremes of the time but nevertheless provided a good insight to those who were born after and not before the war - the art of going without and making do, for example. Jones the Butcher and his veteran delivery van , for example!

    • @edithlewis9330
      @edithlewis9330 Před 4 lety +83

      To Joyce and Elizabeth: Wow, small world. The daughter of the butcher and granddaughter of Mr. Green, commenting on the same channel. I bet this film brings back a lot of memories for you two.

  • @rosemarydudley9954
    @rosemarydudley9954 Před rokem +84

    I think this video should be shown in all British schools today. It may get the children thinking just how lucky they are today...Everything is sooooo taken for granted.

    • @anitalanger3589
      @anitalanger3589 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Amen!

    • @illusion466
      @illusion466 Před 6 měsíci

      I think kids today would do better than to be guilt tripped by this propaganda. Who started the war? Who imposed these restrictions? Not the common people. And yet young people today should feel "lucky" they enter the workforce with barren job prospects, unaffordable housing, and a government that will lock them up if someone catches the flu.

    • @paper_gem
      @paper_gem Před 4 měsíci +1

      The video just shows how incompetent the government was. They continued with rations after the war while other countries didn't. It's just idiocy.

    • @florenceobrien2822
      @florenceobrien2822 Před 2 měsíci

      Exactly kids need know how we used to live

    • @bruhman2089
      @bruhman2089 Před měsícem +2

      @@paper_gem are you dim? The only reason they did were to pay off debts they had for america, rebuild the economy as well. If they didn't keep rationing at that time, they would have no food at all.

  • @donaldhoult7713
    @donaldhoult7713 Před rokem +325

    I was born in very early 1938 and lost my entire family during WW2: ended up in a State orphanage. My usual total food intake throughout my time in there was: a bowl of porridge and one piece of bread/margarine for breakfast; a bowl of stew at mid-day ( 200 yards to school so we did not get dinner in school ); and a slice of bread with cod liver oil dribbled on it at about 4:30 pm. Very occasionally we were fed some dried egg ( I adored it ) and had our individual ration of 3 pear drops; which never varied. A whole sweet was never consumed at one 'go ' but was sucked for a short while and then returned to one's little storage jar - the rest to be enjoyed later.
    In 1947 I finally saw a raw egg - never seen one before and I thought it was a stone. I had never seen raw meat nor cooked meat in a form I could recognise. Finally adopted I had to ask before I could have a piece of bread, a biscuit etc. and bacon/meat was commonly removed from my plate by my ' male ' adopter. and consumed by himself. I knew fish only from the picture on a tin of pilchards and for some time thought fish tasted like tomato. I learned differently when I began to receive school dinner - a magnificent meal but often small portions. I cannot recall being anything but hungry; apart from after that meal.

    • @rightlyso8507
      @rightlyso8507 Před rokem +72

      I just got through reading your riveting account of what you had to go through as an orphaned, very young, child. Thank you very much for posting it. I would wager that once the rationing had stopped, or, more so, once you were on your own as an adult, these past tribulations influenced your life in ways quite differently than others who'd not experienced them at all. Once again, thank you.

    • @random6809
      @random6809 Před rokem +53

      Donald, sometimes watching CZcams is worthwhile. Your fascinating comment made it so today.
      Cheers.

    • @i.m.7710
      @i.m.7710 Před rokem +35

      Horrible. A childhood stolen. Even worse that the adult stole food from a child.
      My dad never talked about his childhood or the war but I suspect food was limited at home in the Depression because he was a cook in ww2 and worked in the restaurant business until he passed in 1979.

    • @anadorsamp3560
      @anadorsamp3560 Před rokem +18

      Lo siento mucho ❤️

    • @user-ci6vj5ql3g
      @user-ci6vj5ql3g Před rokem +28

      Как жаль, чёрствость взрослых это то с чем я никогда не могу примериться.
      Помню мы с бабушкой ходили пешком в наш маленький сад. По дороге она ,мне 6 летней девочки, показывала разные травы рассказывая как их можно приготовить для еды и лечения.
      " Вот будет голод" эти ее слова меня очень удивляли ? 1968 год. О каком голоде она говорит и когда он будет?
      Вот 1993 - 1999 . Небольшой город на Волге. Пусто в магазинах,талоны на самое необходимое. Масло,сыр,яйца, сахарный песок. Семья ,двое маленьких детей. Задержка зарплаты у мужа по 8 месяцев. Тогда я вспомнила все,чему меня учила бабушка. Была ей очень благодарна.
      Вот липа - заваривать и пить,вместо чая. Помогает от температуры и кашля.
      Вот пижма - можно жевать сухую.
      Вот одуванчик - из листьев делать салат.
      Вот цикорий - можно заменить кофе.
      Вишнёвой полочкой - чистить зубы.
      Вот у этого растения - мыльный корень.
      Это ужасно,что теперь я записываю всё это для моих внуков.
      Я очень благодарна " окорочкам Буша", также как мой отец всегда вспоминал железные банки с яичным порошком из Америки.
      Говорил,что только они не дали им умереть от голода.
      Теперь мне так больно за все ,что делается . За развязанную войну, за авторитарный режим.
      Когда же мы все поймём каждый день это - радость. Каждый человек - ценность.
      Извините за сумбурность.

  • @roryboytube
    @roryboytube Před 4 lety +338

    My Grandmother lived through both wars.
    Now i know why her cupboards were full of Fray Bentos tinned steak & kidney pies, corned beef, spam and Princes tinned Salmon. All of that stuff could survive a nuclear holocaust and still be good to go with a bit of HP brown sauce.

  • @lorrainechandler7864
    @lorrainechandler7864 Před 6 lety +47

    My late mother(born in 1934) grew up in London during the war.When she married my Dad,and came to America in 1955,she was amazed at the abundance and variety of food in grocery stores.

    • @johnbarton7543
      @johnbarton7543 Před 6 lety +8

      I, too, was born in 1934. I,too,lived in London. (Hampstead) during the war. We had rationing until the 1950's.

    • @JoaoFurtadoCoelho777
      @JoaoFurtadoCoelho777 Před 6 lety +9

      If I remember well, it was only in 1955 that rationing in Britain was completely abolished. I first went to Britain in 1951 (London, Oxford...) and - coming from Portugal - I found that restrictions were severe! During the War, we in Portugal had some rationing too; but I remember that several people who lived over here and had some family or just friends living in England or Scotland, would spare some of their rations so that they could send packets to Britain to help those people! As regards food rationing one may say that , by 1950 or before, was completely over. Portugal remained neutral during WWII (luckily for us, of course... but for the Allies as well! Just remember the last scenes of "Casablanca"...)

    • @sibellakingston52
      @sibellakingston52 Před rokem +6

      I live in Australia, and after watching a lot of CZcams videos, I'm amazed today at the abundance and variety of food in American grocery stores. If you guys had a good medical system, I'd come and live there.

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong Před 10 měsíci

      Guns. We have guns. You gave yours up. We don't need someone here that gives away guns. If you do come, bring some of those hotties from Wicked Weasel with you. You can stay for a week if you bring some of those baes. Mate. @@sibellakingston52

    • @tomcarl8021
      @tomcarl8021 Před 10 měsíci

      @@sibellakingston52 We don't need or want you to live here.

  • @leeriches8841
    @leeriches8841 Před rokem +46

    My grandmother survived a concentration camp and on liberation, married a British soldier and eventually moved to the UK. Even with rationing in effect, she was astounded at the amount of food available here in the UK- she hadn't seen anything like it in her life. She was from an extremely wealthy family in Poland that had access to anything they needed until they were stripped of everything and forced into a ghetto but regardless, she was in heaven with the choice of food on arrival to the UK!

    • @gracemarion499
      @gracemarion499 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Wow. Thank you for sharing your story.

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong Před 10 měsíci

      LOL@@gracemarion499

    • @NSResponder
      @NSResponder Před 3 měsíci

      I read a memoir of a Nazi POW who said he realized they couldn't win when he got to the USA and found that the rations he was given as a prisoner were better than he got from the Wehrmacht before he was captured.

  • @JoyceHopewell
    @JoyceHopewell Před 11 lety +132

    Thanks - it was an amazing experience to find this clip. I followed it up by contacting the Imperial War Museum who sold me a copy of the film for my own family archives, so now my grown up offspring can see what Grandpa looked like & did in the war. It really was quite a find.

  • @GreenmanXIV
    @GreenmanXIV Před 9 lety +250

    As a 1949 baby boomer, I can remember the concentrated orange juice, and the malt extract. No sweets, and no adverts on the BBC.

    • @leeandbeahinton
      @leeandbeahinton Před 8 lety +12

      +GreenmanXIV
      wot no cod-liver oil?

    • @goodday4112
      @goodday4112 Před 7 lety +4

      MY PARENTS GAVE THAT TO ME SOMETIMES. IT WAS EVIL.. NOW I HEAR IT REALLY IS BAD FOR THE GUTS.

    • @kohedunn
      @kohedunn Před 6 lety +2

      And the cod liver oil..... hhahahah

    • @ritawing1064
      @ritawing1064 Před 6 lety +5

      GreenmanXIV oooh malt extract!

    • @courvoisibean
      @courvoisibean Před 6 lety +4

      GreenmanXIV powdered egg

  • @Josh_Fredman
    @Josh_Fredman Před 4 lety +134

    I love that joke at the end. Anyhow, it may not effect entire nations anymore, but many people still struggle with hunger. I live in the US: When I was in college I couldn't afford breakfast at all, and lunch was only half what I would rather have eaten. I was on the "standard" meal plan at my dormitory, which assumes you go home to your parents for the weekends and sometimes go out to eat during the week, but I had no such support and had to make that meal plan stretch to cover everything, and it was not nearly enough. Well, enough to live on, but not enough for satisfaction. Shortly after college, I was unemployed for six months and had to cut out lunch too. It was just dinner and one snack per day. I got so gaunt! Beans, pasta, a chicken a week, a few cans of tuna...that was about it. I probably would have qualified for food stamps and food banks, but I didn't realize it. No one is taught about those things. Today I weigh nearly double what I weighed at my lightest, and I'd much rather have it this way than go back to living with daily hunger. It drives you mad...

    • @maggiemae2585
      @maggiemae2585 Před 4 lety +18

      I feel for you. After college, i took a job as a substitute teacher for a rural school to teach music. It snowed so much that there was pretty much no school for the entire month of January. I went a whole month without making money and then had to wait until mid February to get a paycheck with any money on it. For breakfast each morning, i had a packet of hot chocolate made with hot water, lunch was a rice crispy treat bought in the cafeteria and dinner might be some potato chips. I had $10 a week for gasoline and it had to last a whole week. This was in 2000. It never occurred to me to apply for government assistance. I had a nice, thin figure then!

    • @paulashe61
      @paulashe61 Před 2 lety +12

      In Scotland 50 years ago one meal was sufficient

    • @paulashe61
      @paulashe61 Před 2 lety +11

      No fat people and everyone walked

    • @tedoneilclark4710
      @tedoneilclark4710 Před rokem +2

      It's a miracle that you survived. 💐

    • @Earthbound369
      @Earthbound369 Před rokem +11

      I eat one or two meals a day by choice. I'm used to it and don't get hungry. I never worry about gaining weight , can eat as much as I want when I do eat. The less you eat the less you need to eat.
      Americans eat way too much.

  • @littleflower8915
    @littleflower8915 Před 4 lety +38

    Food rationing only ended in Britain on July 4,1954 with the end of sale restrictons on meat and bacon.

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před rokem +3

      Interestingly, without all the fatty meat, heart attacks and strokes dropped.

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem +5

      @@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 did they really though? seed oils like margarine have a much stronger correlation with reduced lifespan. animals fats prolong lifespan. this is the well-known French Paradox.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Před rokem

      @@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Nice opinion, not a fact.

    • @edmundoftheangles7977
      @edmundoftheangles7977 Před rokem

      @@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 this is sarcasm?

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem +1

      Even bread rationing lasted a few years after the war.

  • @ol-Sarge
    @ol-Sarge Před 3 lety +35

    I was friends with an older English couple for about 20 years until their passing. He was child during WW2 in London and would talk about living and sleeping in the underground (The Tube) tunnels at night due to the bombing. His wife was from a farm in rural Dorset during the war. She talked about going to bed and hearing the German planes headed to London and other cities. She said the family seldom took shelter as there was nothing to bomb near her except dirt. I stayed with them at their home in Poole. Even then they still tended a small garden in their back yard. Ray said the war turned the UK into a nation of gardeners. Both world wars are given little coverage in history classes here as they seldom get much time as the school year is almost over by the time they get to it. Rationing over here pretty much ended with the war. I was surprised to learn of continued rationing for almost another 15 years after the war ended. I have read that at the height of the convoy sinking that the UK was down to a few weeks of food supplies on hand and real chances of starvation happening. All things considered, you have a lot to be proud of. I’m glad there is a special friendship between our countries (and all the Common Wealth nations) and hope that continues indefinitely.

    • @babboon5764
      @babboon5764 Před 12 dny

      Apparently the Americans DID understand how bad things were in mainland Europe & gifted the clever & generous Marshall Plan
      But somehow seemed to assume Britain - having been on the winning side - must be OK
      With the result AFTER the war, hit by an exceptionally severe winter, there was a near famine.
      The thing which it was said shocked American into turning the food supplies back on was a film of farm labourers using pneumatic drills (jackhammers) to get potatoes out of the iron hard frozen ground)

    • @SimonGardiner-bj3pq
      @SimonGardiner-bj3pq Před 6 dny

      Lovely comment - thank you.

  • @ericajohnson3504
    @ericajohnson3504 Před rokem +71

    My parents lived through rationing with 3 children. Mum always kept a very well stocked food cupboard and passed that habit to me. My children think I am ridiculous but I would rather that than any other way. I can always make something to eat in contrast to one of my daughters who lets her cupboards empty completely before she shops. I think we are going to be going through rationing again soon here in the UK, unless they just have us all use food banks.

    • @capastianluna8896
      @capastianluna8896 Před rokem +5

      Be different these days, thanks to new foods, people can survive longer without it, I would keep a stocked up cupboard though just incase.

    • @pencilme1n
      @pencilme1n Před rokem +4

      Food banks will be the ration collection hubs.

    • @pencilme1n
      @pencilme1n Před rokem +2

      It will be real life version of hunger games.

    • @lindadeeds5326
      @lindadeeds5326 Před rokem +2

      I’m in the US- why do you think that there is going to be rationing in the UK? We certainly are having trouble getting certain things where I am, but not to the point where you can’t get any food.

    • @ericajohnson3504
      @ericajohnson3504 Před rokem +2

      @@lindadeeds5326 We have strikes at the largest Port in the UK, Rail strikes and a shortage of lorry drivers too, which affects the transport of food and goods. Add to that the rapidly rising cost of Food, Fuel and Services while our wages are kept low, most have not had a pay increase of any substance for years. Even well paid people are having to rely on food banks to feed their families. Rationing may have to come in to ensure everyone can eat.

  • @jacquescoupal6231
    @jacquescoupal6231 Před 7 lety +520

    Fish was not rationed, so fishermen would go out and catch fish for dinner and for selling. Fish and chips become "famous" during this time.

    • @jrgboy
      @jrgboy Před 7 lety +27

      Potatoes and fat were rationed though, the old chippie where I used to live said he was only open two days a week for one hour..

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 Před 7 lety +78

      Fish was not rationed as the government were aware of the tough work fishermen had to do to catch the fish in waters where the Nazis had mined and patrolled. So fish was unrationed but hard to find, which is why the price of fish and chips rose high.

    • @jacquescoupal6231
      @jacquescoupal6231 Před 7 lety +3

      True

    • @felathar1985
      @felathar1985 Před 6 lety +6

      The more you know

    •  Před 5 lety +10

      Today, fish is more expensive than meat, which is half as healthy!

  • @GodConsciousness
    @GodConsciousness Před 3 lety +46

    An example of true national effort. There's a Pathé video that shows that despite six years of rationing and bombing and fighting, on VE Day these same long-suffering Britons massed in front of Buckingham Palace, sang God Save The King, and shouted "We want the King!" Never fails to produce a tear in my eye. God bless and preserve their memory!

    • @martinjenkins6467
      @martinjenkins6467 Před rokem +19

      The last couple of years with this
      Bloody covid have made think of
      That generation. We are a bloody
      Disgrace, panic buying at
      Supermarkets and they went
      Through a world war.

    • @brianallsopp69
      @brianallsopp69 Před rokem +2

      Bulldog Breed 🧐🇬🇧✌

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem +2

      @@martinjenkins6467 they had no choice. This is a propaganda film. Being surrounded by water made imported products more difficult to get so they rationed. And they rationed bread eventually and continued rationing for bread years after.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před rokem +2

      @@kristinesharp6286 no, this is documentary not propaganda.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem +3

      @@alanhat5252 70 years from now someone will be posting to the internet about how we rationed baby formula and toilet paper during COVID and someone will comment how everyone worked together to make supplies stretch and more babies were breast fed. Uh no.

  • @Hotshotter3000
    @Hotshotter3000 Před 11 lety +63

    There was a lot of truth to that statement. During WW2 in Britain, from what I understand, rates of heart disease, diabetes, and other illnesses plummeted to the point that by wars end, they were non-existent. Watch the Supersizers Wartime for a look. If you know that show, you'd be amazed how their general health actually improved over the week (while normally there's some less than desirable results from other regimes).

    • @JPKnapp-ro6xm
      @JPKnapp-ro6xm Před 4 lety +21

      It's true that, meager as the rations seem, they actually produced a healthier population. But that's partly because before the war the poor ate WORSE than when food was rationed. Before the war the poor couldn't afford to eat much more than tea and bread.

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem

      seed oils correlate with heart attack rates, so that margarine was basically poisoning them. stick to lard and butter. Not sugar.

    • @alexojideagu
      @alexojideagu Před rokem +2

      @moi2833 Paradise. We couldn't afford water so my dad would punch us in the face and we'd drink our tears with a slice of used paper for tea. And we were GRATEFUL.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před rokem

      @moi2833 no need to take the p1ss, just learn what bad government can do to people

    • @MargaretUK
      @MargaretUK Před rokem +1

      It's a Monty python reference!

  • @ingiliz1
    @ingiliz1 Před 10 lety +37

    Was born in Forest Hill, Lewisham. I joined up in 61, mum and dad and the family moved to Hastings in 63. I worked in France from 76 and got retired there. Still go home 2/3 times a year. Mum is still alive at 93 yo. I went back to see my birth-place, nothing remained. They even torn down my school and built houses. So sad.

  • @cuddlypandas2995
    @cuddlypandas2995 Před 4 lety +50

    I find these kinds of films so interesting... so now that the war is over I still see some people struggling to buy food. So grateful for even a pack of noodles a day here at college. Great learning.

  • @PatrickKelly-lz3pv
    @PatrickKelly-lz3pv Před 4 lety +33

    My Mother did all of the families clothes shopping in our local Army and Navy surplus store in post war England, inside that store was uniforms from all over the world, I started school in 1950 and my Mother bought me set of clothing that she thought would be durable and hard wearing fashionable was never a thought that occupied her mind, and so it was I attended school dressed as a Japanese General and I didn't even stick out from the crowd lots of my classmates were dressed as Gestapo Officers and storm troopers.

    • @OriginalMiztiki
      @OriginalMiztiki Před 4 lety +8

      I adore your comment! 😂

    • @alhilford2345
      @alhilford2345 Před 3 lety +4

      Must be the same shop my mother went to!
      I had the ugliest, heaviest, bulkiest army coat that you've ever seen, and I had to wear it to school because it was warm and "practical"
      Hated it!

    • @TragedyASkates
      @TragedyASkates Před rokem +3

      This is undoubtedly the absolute best comment I’ve read on CZcams.

    • @PatrickKelly-lz3pv
      @PatrickKelly-lz3pv Před rokem +6

      @@TragedyASkates Thanks my friend although my post was meant to be a bit of fun, it was true apart from the Japanese General bit, I and my class mates did attend school dressed in all manner of military uniform, my Mother also made floor coverings from the uniforms she bought and she tossed a few army great coats on the bed to cover up me and my two brothers and the dog they were warm but very heavy making us prisoners in bed till she released us in the morning.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +3

      @@PatrickKelly-lz3pv
      cool story kid

  • @chrisreed26
    @chrisreed26 Před 4 lety +71

    Here in the US my mother told me stories of how they had rations and how since they were Mormon, they had always been taught to have a years supply of food for an emergency, even back then..so when she was a child, 30's/40's, she said they had plenty of sugar and flour etc..pretty much everything nobody else had a large supply of, they had plenty because of the teachings of the church to save for a rainy day..Mormons to this day still do this..food storage...Not a bad idea no matter your religion or lack there of!

    • @Yetaxa
      @Yetaxa Před 4 lety +2

      Bet they're laughing now

    • @LivingMyLife1991
      @LivingMyLife1991 Před 4 lety +17

      I am not American, but my grandma taught me that if you have good amount supplies of onions, flour and sugar in the house, then you won’t see hunger. Also I would add potatoes, since they are cheap and versitile and tasty. You can do a lot with them. We used to make a lot of preservaties of cucumbers, sweet pumpkins and apples and cherries too in syrup, which were really awesome to have during winter months. We also made all of our own jams and juices too (cranberry juice, apple juice and so on). I think that saved us a lot of money and saved us from hunger. I am happy we have our own piece of land, where we can grow everything, not many people have that luxury.

    • @mh53j
      @mh53j Před rokem +4

      I live in a town that has a Mormon college in it; guess that explains why the store shelves are ALWAYS empty.

    • @shantishanti1949
      @shantishanti1949 Před rokem +4

      I think its a very sensible thing to have food stored for bad times and although not Mormon I do and always have a pantry full of food - long shelf life foods. I think we may be heading to a time where all should be doing this and will be grateful they did.

    • @Ro_-hk4yz
      @Ro_-hk4yz Před rokem +1

      hoarding isn't the goal either. that's selfish.

  • @11Grayfox11
    @11Grayfox11 Před 14 lety +107

    In those times there was a strong sense of community and a "we're all in it together" attitude so there was lots of private trading and sharing so everyone helped each other get through those difficult times. Saving, budgeting and being resourceful were common attitudes in those days. If we could adopt some of those wartime principles we could get through this world reccession as they got through their ration period.

    • @kittykitkat4968
      @kittykitkat4968 Před 2 lety +13

      Absolutely, Unity is what we need

    • @WOLFROY47
      @WOLFROY47 Před rokem

      the poor, are the only ones helping the poor, the powers that be, even tax you, for dying

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Před rokem +5

      @@kittykitkat4968 Now more than ever.

    • @CJM527
      @CJM527 Před rokem +6

      This message is just as relevant today. Sadly us humans never change

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před rokem +1

      many of the survival skills were taught at school

  • @patojanen6163
    @patojanen6163 Před 11 lety +84

    what this doesn't show is later in the war when the shops were half empty, because so many foods were imported (flour, sugar, meat) and the merchant marine was bombed by the Germans on their way to the UK - you got 2 ounces of meat per person, per week, if you were lucky and could find a butcher's shop with a supply. I didn't know what an orange or pineapple was until I was about 10 - and sugar was pretty much unavailable, still rationed in 1950. Tough times, but we got through it.

    • @usuk9316
      @usuk9316 Před 4 lety +11

      I949 here. I remember powdered egg.

    • @Thepourdeuxchanson
      @Thepourdeuxchanson Před 3 lety +11

      @@usuk9316 I still have my mother's old wartime cookery book (The Be-Ro Cook book) where they talk about "one egg - reconstituted" and something called soyghetti.

    • @usuk9316
      @usuk9316 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Thepourdeuxchanson oh that's a treasure to have of your Mother's. Times were tough but we were happy.
      Stay stay.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay Před 3 lety +6

      Yes, the film says everyone can get their ration limits of everything but that was far from the truth as the war went on (at least according to the experts who ran "1940's House").

    • @mackenziedrake
      @mackenziedrake Před 3 lety +2

      @@emjayay I knew that the amounts went down over time, and that you couldn't save stamps week to week, but I didn't know actual shortages on rationed goods happened. I'll have to look into that further. Thanks.

  • @patojanen6163
    @patojanen6163 Před 10 lety +92

    We moved in 1950 from 2 rooms in Camden Town to a new 3 bdroom flat in Islington - thought we'd died and gone to heaven! We also got a TV about that time (Muffin the Mule) - there were 30 3 or 3 bdroom flats - kids coming out of the woodwork! Everyone was in the same boat, working hard, no money, but at least, no bombs dropping on us - now I live in the U.S. (Minneapolis, Minnesota) - still miss my old London. Where are you?

    • @hint0122
      @hint0122 Před 4 lety +2

      I live in Minnesota too

    • @lauraarcher1730
      @lauraarcher1730 Před 4 lety +3

      Pat Ojanen nothing stays the same!

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 3 lety +10

      That's what ALL Londoner's are now saying. It's more like Londonistan.

    • @donaldboughton8686
      @donaldboughton8686 Před 2 lety +2

      So much of old London has gone. I do not think the my late father would recognise St Mary Axe now though he worked there all his working life apart from a stint at the Camberwell TA site in the pay corp. It was an Anti Aircraft site during WW II,

    • @mrpotatohead6264
      @mrpotatohead6264 Před 2 lety +3

      We left London for Liverpool. We struggled constantly to afford a box of a flat, and now live in a 2 up 2 down twice the size and we can afford it more easily.

  • @barryrudge1576
    @barryrudge1576 Před rokem +17

    I was born in 1946 one of the baby boomer children and remember rationing and taking the ration book with me to the shops when doing errands for Mom. Towards the end of rationing I remember my first banana, and my first large orange they came in a small bag of fruit from grandma, the paper bag usually contained two or three items of what ever was in season.

    • @mreale2811
      @mreale2811 Před rokem +1

      I was born in England in 1948.I remember a 3rd or maybe 4th birthday party. As a gift from a boy up the street he gave me an orange, I believe it was my first orange.I know that it was rationed as my mother told me & said that it was precious. I’ve been to orange groves in Southern Italy & Florida & have never tasted an orange that was so good. 🇨🇦🇬🇧

    • @trudiemundell74
      @trudiemundell74 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I remember sweet rationing

    • @fenrichlee2867
      @fenrichlee2867 Před 10 měsíci

      I too was a '46 boomer, hardly saw my father he was ether in work or down the pub. Looking back I realised I was just a pest that had to be tolerated.

  • @starview1
    @starview1 Před 9 lety +129

    Excellent perspective,hope no one ever needs to go through this misery again

    • @augurcybernaut4785
      @augurcybernaut4785 Před 5 lety +4

      starview1 man we have short memories

    • @dmoskha
      @dmoskha Před 5 lety +16

      I actually think it's a good idea to curb consumerism ... if they could do it then in the name of victory in the war, we can do it now to save our planet.

    • @CBJAMPA
      @CBJAMPA Před 5 lety +13

      starview1 - Hopefully we’ll be able to red pill the sjw’s, snow flakes, progressives and the likes of them in time before it’s too late (see Venezuela). All these mentally challenged people dream of is a world of equal misery for all mankind (except for themselves in control, of course!).

    • @karenvolk6808
      @karenvolk6808 Před rokem +9

      And here we are in 2022 it doesn't look good!

    • @JLSMaytham
      @JLSMaytham Před rokem +5

      A quarter of UK population live in poverty (before Cost of Living Crisis).
      They have the misery they just don't have the fair sharing out of essentials that Rationing provides.
      There was no rationing in WW1 and the rich had as much as they wanted while the poor starved and were turfed out of their rented accommodation if their breadwinner died in the trenches.
      The government were prepared for WW2!with Rationing because they needed high moral for industrial output.
      Presumably they don't need us now or they'd take better care. Were just "unproductive eaters"

  • @AC-ih7jc
    @AC-ih7jc Před 3 lety +22

    What actually made the whole British WWII rationing system up close and personal for me (an American) was watching "Dad's Army" and Ruth Goodman's "Wartime Farm" series.

    • @ek8710
      @ek8710 Před rokem +3

      Both of those are great, Dad's army is a classic.

  • @xXxSPStyleLoverzxXx
    @xXxSPStyleLoverzxXx Před 11 lety +89

    No, we do not say 'candy' in england, we would say 'sweets'. :-)

  • @MrDaiseymay
    @MrDaiseymay Před 3 lety +12

    MY MOM TOLD ME THAT NEWS OF FOOD ARRIVING IN THE SHOPS (ANY FOOD) SPREAD LIKE WILDFIRE. THEY WOULD DROP WHATEVER THEY WERE DOING AND DASH THERE. THERE WAS NO GARANTEE OF FOOD AVAILABLE, BY THE TIME YOU REACHED THE COUNTER EITHER. HOW DISHEARTENING IS THAT. SHE SAID SHE'D JOIN ANY QUEUE WHILE PASSING, IN CASE SHE WAS SUCCESSFULL. ON TOP OF ALL THE OTHER ANXIETIES, WHAT A GENERATION.

  • @oldproji
    @oldproji Před 4 lety +42

    The modern generation just wouldn't be able to cope. Thank you mum. What a grand job you did for us.

    • @stephenparkes5932
      @stephenparkes5932 Před 2 lety +5

      That's correct , they wouldn't know what to do with raw ingredients 😂😂😂😂😂😂 they think sweetcorn comes in tins😂😂😂😂😂😂🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @kevinstorey6287
      @kevinstorey6287 Před 2 lety +7

      Nonsense. That's more than enough food. And she gets a new winter coat every year? My coats atleast 5 years old. Sounded kinda spoiled to me. The lines looked sucky tho.

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem

      If this sort of thing happened in the modern day I would support the enemy. Screw socialism and screw rationing.

    • @dianaphillips5631
      @dianaphillips5631 Před rokem

      No obesserty in them days 🙄

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Před rokem +3

      They panic the moment their phones die and won't be able to recharge, food also magically appears on the supermarket shelves, soon not anymore.

  • @patbender4628
    @patbender4628 Před rokem +7

    My grandparents lived in Cumbria and they had an allotment. They kept chickens for eggs and meat and two pigs. Mum said they got extra rations for one of the pigs which had to be given to the butcher when fattened up. Neighbours contributed their scraps - mostly vegetable peelings - in return for being at the front of the queue for eggs and meat. Apparently my gran and grandad were very popular people cos although others had allotments grandad was a farmer's son and knew how to keep livestock.

  • @lanamay198
    @lanamay198 Před rokem +6

    The people are dressed beautifully, so much better than today. And this is a war time… Everybody is dressed properly and decently. Excellent quality of the clothes. Now we struggle to buy some necessary clothes or footwear- it is just a rubbish: the materials, and the shape doesn’t match human body and a foot

  • @zzhang11790
    @zzhang11790 Před 4 lety +120

    Even in the nightmare of the war, British ladies still kept elegant life. It’s admirable

    • @kathyh4804
      @kathyh4804 Před 4 lety +28

      True! They didn’t have much, yet they stayed classy and elegant! Unlike NOW where they have access to everything you could dream of and still have no class

    • @PolarBear-rc4ks
      @PolarBear-rc4ks Před 4 lety +13

      @@kathyh4804 well not all of them

    • @gogagahihigo1545
      @gogagahihigo1545 Před 3 lety +4

      Modern British ladies have everything and want to do nothing while having everything. Maybe disciple or another war is what they need

    • @resentfuldragon
      @resentfuldragon Před 3 lety +3

      @@gogagahihigo1545 Its the men who lost their self respect. If men went after young and elegant ladies like they used to then all the useless ones would wise up quick.
      When the demand for stable relationships and families go up and the demand for quick fun goes down, the western world will be fixed.
      Unfortunately that won't happen because more and more of the incoming men are raised by single moms so they will be almost 100% doomed to having zero standards and manliness.

    • @mackenziedrake
      @mackenziedrake Před 3 lety +5

      @@resentfuldragon Okay, incel.

  • @toypupanbai3544
    @toypupanbai3544 Před 10 lety +31

    It's true that British assets were sold at ,'Fire Sale', prices.
    I think the UK finished paying back Lend Lease bills a year or two ago.

    • @3rdoldhen
      @3rdoldhen Před 4 lety +6

      One of very very few who did... Like it or not, we are deeply related the Brits & Americans... & we need to continue to care for & about one another.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Před rokem

      @@3rdoldhen Agreed, now more than ever, sadly the panic and desperation soon will try to prevent that, I've seen on deployment what hungry people are capable of, soon the entire west will face it and millions if not billions will die, just as the elites planned.

  • @kathleencatherwood8234
    @kathleencatherwood8234 Před 4 lety +21

    I feel sad for my relatives who had to do this. They survived with a war going on & so will we without a war.

  • @NeoFalcon69
    @NeoFalcon69 Před 10 lety +63

    This film was made for the American public explaining the effects of rationing and basically how the landlease agreement benefitted the British hence the prices being in US dollars and certain terms changed for the benefit of the American public.

    • @leemorgan8478
      @leemorgan8478 Před 10 lety +23

      Did you know it was only a couple of years ago we paid our war debt back to America through the land lease agreement and we had to let the USA use our naval base at Bermuda I think it's until 2025 .

    • @magnoliasouth
      @magnoliasouth Před 8 lety +11

      +NeoFalcon69 I have no doubt about that. It's an American narrator and it's about British rationing. It's a propaganda film, but too bad Americans wouldn't wake up and smell the coffee, as it were. If we had aided the British, imagine how quickly the war would have ended. More lives would have been saved.
      Our government was acting very much like the Obamanation we have now. It disgusts me.

    • @matrimcauthon7937
      @matrimcauthon7937 Před 8 lety +2

      +magnoliasouth Not our war. In fact, many were agitating for war AGINST Britain. Don't forget, we've gone to war twice aginst the English.

    • @chuckschafer942
      @chuckschafer942 Před 7 lety +2

      we did aid britan in ww2

    • @adelarsen9776
      @adelarsen9776 Před 6 lety +8

      UK paid back Lend Lease in 2005.

  • @squiggly7
    @squiggly7 Před rokem +9

    It's amazing to see the spirit of cooperation. I love how people passed the time waiting in line by conversing. These days it seems that people would rather use having to wait for anything as an excuse to act despicably toward others if to acknowledge them at all.

    • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
      @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Před 9 měsíci

      I consider myself fortunate to not see much in the way of people acting despicably toward each other in line at places. There's not much conversation among people in lines, that I've observed, unless 2 or 3 people are there together, but 99% of what I observe is people minding their own business (often occupied by an activity on their electronic device), and the occasional complaint of one's wait time (which I've observed since I was a kid in the 70s). People will sometimes observe a person who has far fewer items than they do, and let that person go ahead of them; I've done this when I've had 10+ items, and another person had 3 or 4 items; I have been on the receiving end of this kindness, as well.

  • @almostfm
    @almostfm Před 2 lety +6

    My mom was in school during the war. Here in the US, the motto was "Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without".

  • @natalya6091
    @natalya6091 Před 3 lety +6

    What is the greatest feeling of all?
    That is putting a smile on another's face.
    Hello from Russia.
    Thanks!

  • @Snigelkotten
    @Snigelkotten Před 5 lety +48

    This video really makes me appreciate my daily food more and not complaining about anything :|

    • @WarhammerWings
      @WarhammerWings Před 4 lety +5

      I still think that the whole planet needs to restore rationing.

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem

      @@WarhammerWings yes because you're evil. pure and simple. you belong on a list with the other socialists.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem

      They were meant to be rosy about the whole thing it’s a propaganda film.

  • @DannnnnyW
    @DannnnnyW Před 3 lety +12

    Thanks again you guys and girls for helping keeping us supplied during the early days of the war and throughout. 🇬🇧🇺🇸

    • @donaldhoult7713
      @donaldhoult7713 Před rokem

      @SuperdryDanny. At considerable profit to themselves.

    • @kuchikopi4631
      @kuchikopi4631 Před rokem

      ​​@@donaldhoult7713 well yeah, the UK would have done the same thing if the situation was reversed :/ why complain

  • @jrgboy
    @jrgboy Před 5 lety +25

    Sugar was rationed until 1954...

  • @nomdeplume798
    @nomdeplume798 Před rokem +5

    A lot of people think rationing ended as the war ended. My wife was born in 1953, eight years after the end of the war, but was issued with a ration card at birth; we still have it.

  • @ingiliz1
    @ingiliz1 Před 10 lety +75

    I remember mum thumping a piece of whale meat on the back steps, trying to tenderise it before cooking. Nan made custard with saccharine or black treacle because of rationing. If I had been good, dad would give the ration book to go buy 2 oz sweets. Apparently, I was 6 before I saw a real egg or banana. Bread and dripping, spam, corned beef. Still enjoy it.

    • @LindaTCornwall
      @LindaTCornwall Před 7 lety +3

      Whale meat? Where did they ge that from? wow must ask my mum if she ever ate whale meat in the war.

    • @adelarsen9776
      @adelarsen9776 Před 6 lety +3

      Norway.
      Along with rendered whale fat oil used in quenching steel in Sheffield.

    • @steveroyle6002
      @steveroyle6002 Před 6 lety +2

      Linda T Norway
      .My dad bought some and fried it. Big, big mistake. Far to oily and was inedible.

    • @johnbarton7543
      @johnbarton7543 Před 6 lety +5

      I can remember whale meat. It was a very pale colour, and had little taste. It was sometimes served in "British Restaurants" which were a chain of government restaurants.

    • @michaelrimmington4981
      @michaelrimmington4981 Před 6 lety +14

      There was a joke during the war. It's a Vera Lyn meal, Whale meat again!"

  • @zephyrsky__
    @zephyrsky__ Před 8 lety +192

    Must have been a nightmare having to queue for hours especially if you also had to do war work AND housework. Not sure how they had the energy! especially on such meagre rations.

    • @matrimcauthon7937
      @matrimcauthon7937 Před 8 lety +30

      +Rayon Bizarre People in Venezuela are finding this out right now. Look for videos of Venezuela and food and you'll see how shitty it gets.

    • @Eszra
      @Eszra Před 7 lety +6

      More sleep for some and many healthy foods were not rationed, thus they could buy more of those items and be filled up. Though when watching films and such like these we only see the harder points to drill it in to us. Though there were many that did have hard times.

    • @zephyrsky__
      @zephyrsky__ Před 7 lety +7

      I didn't realise. Wouldn't wish such conditions on anyone

    • @zephyrsky__
      @zephyrsky__ Před 7 lety +11

      Growing up in Northumberland I know that the war wasn't that stressful for my nana, as her father had an allotment with pigs and chickens. Still, with clothes and petrol etc being rationed too it must have been pretty grim especially in the south.

    • @zephyrsky__
      @zephyrsky__ Před 7 lety +7

      True but it must have been difficult for some to get a sufficient amount of protein. I'm sure there were those that were driven to exhaustion living on veg and powdered egg.

  • @craigslistrro709
    @craigslistrro709 Před 6 lety +46

    Hardship builds strength...Something we desperately need in today's world.

    • @cathjanewhittaker5512
      @cathjanewhittaker5512 Před rokem +3

      Couldn't agree more .

    • @NeilCWCampbell
      @NeilCWCampbell Před rokem +1

      If you went through trauma and turned out alright , then you okay with others enduring trauma. Then you did not in fact turn out alright!

    • @saran3214
      @saran3214 Před 10 měsíci

      @@NeilCWCampbell That is not what he is referring to. He is talking about personal strength.

  • @Gmackematix
    @Gmackematix Před 4 lety +32

    Two years after this they started rationing bread as well, something which hadn't been rationed throughout the war.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +1

      prove it

    • @Gmackematix
      @Gmackematix Před rokem +2

      @@jasonvoorhees5640 What a weird thing to say. If you want to see if it's true, look it up.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 Před rokem

      @@jasonvoorhees5640I can vouch for that statement as I lived thru the 50s born in the 30s. Not rationed during but was after the war. As someone suggests, look it up and learn.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +1

      @@Gmackematix
      liar

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +1

      @@anthonyeaton5153 liar

  • @72mossy
    @72mossy Před 3 lety +7

    My father remembers ration books in Ireland as well growing up in the 40s

  • @rumi9005
    @rumi9005 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Fascinating! I was born in the north of England in 1949. So I don't really remember rationing very much. Though rationing wasn't completely over in the UK till 1954, when I was six.

  • @1940sExperiment
    @1940sExperiment Před 2 lety +5

    This never gets old, I watch this at least a few times a year! 😀

  • @patriciafeehan7732
    @patriciafeehan7732 Před 10 měsíci +6

    We had ration books here in the U.S. too. Milk, Butter, Eggs, Flour,…and of course petrol/gasoline.
    People would swap, if your neighbor needed a cake you might trade flour and sugar. Rationing during WWII.

  • @southlondon63
    @southlondon63 Před 10 měsíci +3

    No wonder my dad was so short compared to me. He was born in 1919 , lived through the depression and entered the Army in 1939.After getting through the the war he came back home to this.

    • @southlondon63
      @southlondon63 Před 2 měsíci

      l can totally relate to that. My old man joined the Royal Engineers and was trained in explosives but in reality he was an infantryman . He fought in North Africa and then got shipped to Burma to stop the Jap offensive on India. As kids we had hand me downs for ever and jumble sales were always there for shoes and more. Me and my brothers did think he was a miser but looking back now he did the best for us as because our mum died early through MS.

  • @patojanen6163
    @patojanen6163 Před 10 lety +62

    Bread and dripping - so good. I thought eggs were only dried, never saw a real one until we got a couple of chickens in the back yard. OMG I forgot about whale meat - bloody awful stuff.

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Před 4 lety +11

      I only realised recently that eggs are the last thing I think to buy., My father worked in an iron foundry, very strenuous hard work, my mother used to give him all the eggs.The one consolation was we had my Dad at home with us.

    • @JimTLonW6
      @JimTLonW6 Před 4 lety +12

      I used to love Bread and Dripping! I had some at a WW2 travel re-creation on the 'Watercress line' in Hampshire, I was tucking in with enthusiasm, but most of the other passengers were rather dubious about it...

    • @oldproji
      @oldproji Před 4 lety +10

      I loved powdered egg. Christmas was the only time we had the aroma of roast chicken wafting through the house, although my mum or my nan could work miracles with the cheaper cuts of beef. Homemade oxtail stew, and even tripe and onions - which is still one of my favorite meals (although the wife hates it with a vengeance). My dislikes were: spam, rabbit stew, Pom powdered potato. Sausages that were full of bread, a bit of gristle and pork belly, and tons of spices to disguise the foul taste. Favourite summer drink was Tizer with ice cream floater. As long as I got my weekly comic papers at the weekend, (Beano, Dandy and Radio Fun (later Film Fun), I was a happy little bunny. And of course, dashing home from school to get the latest Dick Tracy episode on the radio - all part of those memorable days.

    • @pegjones7682
      @pegjones7682 Před 4 lety +2

      What about horse meat? I never touched it but my aunt used to eat the steak.

    • @oldproji
      @oldproji Před 4 lety +4

      @@pegjones7682 My Nan used to go to the horse meat shop at the bottom of Acre Lane in Brixton. She used to buy Milts (an offal) for our cats. Hated the smell of it cooking. Never actually ate horse meat though. I have heard it is a bit sweet.

  • @joao86
    @joao86 Před 7 lety +6

    Excellent video. Thanks for sharing it!

  • @kennethsumerford3480
    @kennethsumerford3480 Před 3 lety +6

    We had rationing cards in the USA in WWII but probably had more food than in Britain. My parents lived through the Great Depression and WWII. My dad was in the US army and worked another job some years. My mother also worked. I was born in 1948. My respect to the British and Irish, great sacrifices and services during WWII. Kenneth, from Texas

  • @TheStevenWhiting
    @TheStevenWhiting Před rokem +3

    2022 Looks like we'll be heading this way again.

  • @gloriaanaruma1279
    @gloriaanaruma1279 Před 4 lety +2

    These videos are all most important. I love all them

  • @margaretdrew2844
    @margaretdrew2844 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I was born in 1945 so just after the war, as a baby wasn’t aware of the rationing . Loved this video, have seen others but this has so much interesting information. ❤

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong Před 10 měsíci

      No you weren't. I saw your birthday card that said Happy 98th birthday Gramma. Stop your story telling in public.

    • @margaretdrew2844
      @margaretdrew2844 Před 10 měsíci

      @@coloradostrong ok

  • @tallypaige5275
    @tallypaige5275 Před 4 lety +8

    My mum was still using powdered egg to make cakes with after the war.We lived in the East End of London,in a tenement.I think kids did fair better in the countryside as they could snare rabbits,have chickens,ect.The black market thrived.My mum would use teabags to darken her legs,and draw a seam down her leg in kohl to make it look like stockings.I think they are rather well in the war,it had to stretch.nowadays we just take food for granted and waste so much.

  • @bankerduck4925
    @bankerduck4925 Před rokem +5

    Ah! This is such an epic film even straight from the beginning. "For tea is as precious to a British worker, as coffee is to an American."

    • @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991
      @dawnkindnesscountsmost5991 Před 9 měsíci

      I'd be happily trading my coffee for others' tea. I'm American born and raised, but never developed a liking or tolerance for coffee, and I love tea. Most of my ancestors came from countries surrounding the North Sea, including 47% from Scotland, so I guess my DNA is infused with tea. 😊

  • @PaulStClair-or3gj
    @PaulStClair-or3gj Před 2 měsíci +2

    Born in 1947, l remember the hard times of rationing. My mother grew potatoes, carrots, onions, cauliflower & other vegetables. She also kept chickens in the garden. My younger brother and l collected blackberries from the shunting yard area of the nearby railway. We always ate well. 🍗🍞🍛🍝She worked as a turner machining parts for tanks and ships also, (before l was born). Hard times indeed.

  • @melesai
    @melesai Před rokem +2

    Interesting! Considering the shortages we are having now! God bless all

  • @AnnetteMurphyger
    @AnnetteMurphyger Před 4 lety +22

    Hard times. Hope we never have them again.

    • @AvecPoesie
      @AvecPoesie Před 4 lety +1

      @Tyler Eyerly Well-stated. I too believe we are on the verge of hard times.

    • @johngrindley169
      @johngrindley169 Před 4 lety

      Well we have food banks today, quite a few are on hard times and have been for quite awhile. also, you see more charity shops in the high street too

    • @ArminHartinger
      @ArminHartinger Před 4 lety +5

      Sadly your hope was in vain now with covid-19 and all that.

    • @Lifeskeyishappiness
      @Lifeskeyishappiness Před 4 lety +2

      2020: Covid19 says hi

  • @ceciliaflorencenapier4595
    @ceciliaflorencenapier4595 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Yes! Things were very hard with rationing. My family were four people and allowed half pound of butter a week. Mother divided it into four and put each on to a pretty plate so it looked more! You never saw a fat person they would be viewed suspiciously!! I’m 93 years old now so I’m not a bad result of going without some food!😊

  • @pamolson23
    @pamolson23 Před 9 lety +26

    Hence, Victory Gardens

  • @judya.shroads8245
    @judya.shroads8245 Před 5 lety +43

    England made all bakeries make the National loaf of bread. It was brown bread that wasn't very tasty as it have alot of the wheat chaff still in it. They were rationed about 14-15 yrs. Too long. Brave, invented and strong ppl.

    • @judya.shroads8245
      @judya.shroads8245 Před 5 lety +6

      Agreed.

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Před 4 lety +7

      I can remember enjoying eating bread. Born 1938. I t was much better than the bread you buy today, it's got no taste.

    • @warreneckels4945
      @warreneckels4945 Před 3 lety +5

      Now, in the United States, you pay twice as much for that sort of bread.

    • @twittykins
      @twittykins Před 2 lety +5

      Many housewives sieved the national flour, then used the wheatgerm/chaff as chicken feed. What an enterpising lot they were!

    • @JPKnapp-ro6xm
      @JPKnapp-ro6xm Před 2 lety +1

      People didn't like the national loaf but it was very good for you.

  • @tommyspike1969
    @tommyspike1969 Před rokem +6

    We all could be reliving this soon.

  • @rosrychaplet
    @rosrychaplet Před 6 lety +24

    His friend is a hoarder. His friend is astute and doesn't have a sweet tooth.

  • @lostindiancamp
    @lostindiancamp Před 13 lety

    What an informative informercial. I love this.

  • @SamuelBlack84
    @SamuelBlack84 Před 10 měsíci +2

    This reminds me of a famous photograph taken when rationing was first repelled and showed a group of kids running into a sweet shop to experience something they had never experienced before
    Gorging 😅

  • @YvonnaFaust
    @YvonnaFaust Před 12 lety +5

    Now, i know the rationing details, thanks a lot for uploading this

  • @luigidisanpietro3720
    @luigidisanpietro3720 Před 4 lety +6

    Recommended to me just in time for the COVID19 pandemic.... such helpful algorithim...👌

  • @jackuzi8252
    @jackuzi8252 Před 6 lety +11

    Americans had it easy not only because we weren't an island surrounded by U-boats, but also because the average American had more resources at his disposal to get extra food on his own. The American family's house was much more likely to include a sizeable yard where veggies could be grown in summer and canned. And if they didn't own a gun to hunt with, they knew someone who did, and every American had access to state game lands. The family that aggressively gardened and hunted (or fished, or trapped) could gather themselves a significant amount of food over the year. Of course that didn't help with gas or tires (a big deal) but it was something.

    • @Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus
      @Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah, but not everybody lived in area's like that. Many had gardens, true. But fishing and hunting? No.

    • @alisonsmith4801
      @alisonsmith4801 Před 4 lety +1

      You Americans never heard of the good old British slogan " Dig for Victory " British people turned over their beloved gardens into vegetable gardens for the duration.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem

      Some of America was surrounded by water. Hawaii and other territories.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem

      @@alisonsmith4801 Victory Gardens were a big thing in the US at that time.

  • @markwilliams4072
    @markwilliams4072 Před 2 lety +5

    I remember those days and indeed experienced them and it was tough going .Unless of course you had friends in the black market as then you could get anything you liked at a price of course.It lasted until 1954 which was a great relief,

  • @Pippins666
    @Pippins666 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I was born in 1947, and even as a 6 year old I remember the rationing. In fact, rationing got tighter when the war ended, because the US then had to feed the ravaged continent of Europe as well as the long suffering Brits. As I recall sweets were the last items to be rationed

  • @michael616joaquin
    @michael616joaquin Před 11 lety +20

    My grandmother went though this and they survived by eating rabbit and kept pigs.

    • @the-chipette
      @the-chipette Před 6 lety +2

      michael616joaquin boyfriend’s grandfather told us stories about hunting and eating wild game, like rabbit, badger, wild birds, and venison. Even made us roasted rabbit.

    • @SirenaSpades
      @SirenaSpades Před 3 lety +1

      In the UK they seized all the farm animals - pigs, cows, etc.

    • @kristinesharp6286
      @kristinesharp6286 Před rokem

      @@the-chipette they were encouraged to keep rabbits and then eat them.

  • @robertfrench1956
    @robertfrench1956 Před 3 lety +2

    Lived in London 1952 and 53--aged 8 and 9. Some elements of wartime rationing were still in effect. School lunch every day was potatoes, a boiled veg, slice of bread, rice pudding with a dollop of jam. On Fridays a tablespoon of cheese was added to the spuds. Pretty slim pickings.

  • @mrstukutela5126
    @mrstukutela5126 Před rokem +2

    My late husband grew up during the second world war and he told me all about the rationing of food: powdered eggs, two ounces of tea per person a week, etc. His mother still had ration books in her sideboard drawer when I met her in 1972!

  • @gazzaboo8461
    @gazzaboo8461 Před 4 lety +10

    Some things weren't rationed. My Nan used to tell of how if a barrage balloon ever came down, it was set upon by hoards of ladies armed with scissors to make into silk bloomers or nighties and such like. No coupons needed as long as you didn't get caught. My dads family were also petty smugglers who hid their wares in their garden under the veggies.
    Hellfire Corner, aka Dover.

  • @Mr.SLovesTheSacredHeartofJesus

    This was very interesting. One thing came to mind as Mrs. Green was getting her weekly supplies, was that i would have done to stretch out the butter ration. Was to mix some of it with the margarine. Improving the favor of it too.

    • @donaldhoult7713
      @donaldhoult7713 Před rokem +2

      @Mr S. Most people did so. I doubt if you have seen or tasted National Margarine. Hard as rock , it nonetheless melted quite rapidly into something resembling cooking oil. Apply heat carefully or all you got was unusable except for cooking. I know this very well for I received a number of beatings in the orphanage because I had been ' careless '.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +2

      @@donaldhoult7713
      that sounds very dickensian 😳

  • @markahomer
    @markahomer Před rokem +2

    I stumbled across this and thought it was a WEF promotional film for the UK in 2030.

  • @galactic4590
    @galactic4590 Před 4 lety +10

    Watched this in School today so Interesting!

  • @robertnelson3672
    @robertnelson3672 Před rokem +3

    My dad used to blame his impatience on being sent out for the rations. He especially didn't like queues. He came to New Zealand in 1947 and rationing ended here in 1950. He was shocked to find it lasted until 1954 in the UK.

    • @donaldhoult7713
      @donaldhoult7713 Před rokem

      Robert Nelson. The nation was bankrupt and feeding its erstwhile enemies.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +2

      @@donaldhoult7713
      erstwhile enemies?

    • @mirror1675
      @mirror1675 Před rokem

      @@jasonvoorhees5640 Former enemies. Like Germany.

  • @alhilford2345
    @alhilford2345 Před 3 lety +3

    " A large consignment of Jaffa oranges has arrived at Salford Docks and there will be an allocation of one pound per ration book in the city shops at the new controlled price of 7d. a pound.
    There was no official news of any other fruit, dried fruit or nuts for Christmas.
    The first consignment of bananas will be reserved for children and young people, but they will not reach the country until January."
    ( Salford City Reporter, December 14, 1945)

  • @proud2bpagan
    @proud2bpagan Před rokem +2

    we live in North America, and i can remember my grandma's stories about how this was practiced here, including victory gardens and collection of meat drippings

  • @ciaraf4158
    @ciaraf4158 Před 2 lety +4

    My great grandmother told that she got her very first job during the war. Her and my great grandfather were married barely a month before he was shipped off. She got her first job at a factory she knew then and there she didn’t want to be a house wife

  • @gunfuego
    @gunfuego Před 4 lety +38

    I knew about the food rationing, but I didn't know everything was rationed even clothing....

    • @samaraisnt
      @samaraisnt Před 4 lety

      They had special ration shoes ! (made of rope, etc)

    • @AbbyGirl11
      @AbbyGirl11 Před 4 lety +3

      It’s gone to multiculturalism, it’s now racist to be proud of English culture and customs.

    • @LynxSouth
      @LynxSouth Před 4 lety +1

      @@AbbyGirl11 It's not actually racist, that's just what some lunkheads are calling it, trying to make everyone believe. We don't have to accept their idiotic judgements.

  • @ravenhill_firelord_1968
    @ravenhill_firelord_1968 Před 4 lety +5

    an interesting look back on our history.

  • @mayhampson4896
    @mayhampson4896 Před 4 lety +5

    I really don’t know what my Mother did with the food coupons . My sister and I were evacuated for fours years. When we came back home in 1945 .we never sat down to regular meals. We had what was called a-scullery . Really old cooking stove, no cooking utensils . Nothing ? Parents were out working all the time..no wonder we had so many things wrong with us as we got older , I know. They did there best for us, but I am sure ,under the circumstances they got the worst end of managing the little money they had , through little education conditions of the times we lived through and being at the lower class of society. They were good working class people caught up in a world of war and greed . Life is a Lottery of Birth Station and Luck . I look back and can see there lives of drudgery , but by god they were the salt of the earth and I salute them , admire them and I would not have changed them , for I learnt all the good things that they taught me. That money cannot buy.

    • @thisorthat7626
      @thisorthat7626 Před 3 lety +1

      May Hampton, it sounds like you were raised correctly even if times were difficult. Money buys ease but money doesn't buy integrity, compassion or wisdom. Blessings to you.

  • @lesliejones6018
    @lesliejones6018 Před 2 lety

    Your dad looks a lovely person! You must feel very proud of him.

  • @leeandbeahinton
    @leeandbeahinton Před 8 lety +19

    The first words I learned to spell were CROSSE & BLACKWELL!

  • @JoyceHopewell
    @JoyceHopewell Před 11 lety +4

    Amazing application of Brylcreem! He always wore it but I don't remember it being as shiny as it is in this film - I reckon you could use it as a mirror!

  • @cecimeci4676
    @cecimeci4676 Před 4 lety +2

    my goodness, soo humble they were❤️

  • @johnbryanros2688
    @johnbryanros2688 Před rokem +2

    My father had an allotment plus the garden which he grew fruit and vegetables.I the garden we grew them around an air raid shelter built by him.I was 5 then and used to dig the ground to put potatoes in.

  • @Treemeadow
    @Treemeadow Před 4 lety +4

    How timely!

  • @26TptCoy
    @26TptCoy Před 4 lety +13

    When my wife was young her father would send her and her sisters to the farm where they would collect grasshoppers from the field and tadpoles from the water, take them home and fry to eat. Her brother would trap field rats and lizards for meat. They would also collect edible plants and weeds for vegetable.

    • @jasonvoorhees5640
      @jasonvoorhees5640 Před rokem +1

      your family sounds like they were one step away from eating out of a garbage can
      🤢

  • @TM-10-py7ji
    @TM-10-py7ji Před 4 lety +2

    The kid who saved and later swapped his sweets for his friend’s saving stamps is a shrewd businessman.

  • @qwertasdcfghjklmo24z
    @qwertasdcfghjklmo24z Před 12 lety +1

    @The11colek Lard is great for frying, roasting and (believe it or not) baking! It is also much cheaper than oils.

  • @wurzal43
    @wurzal43 Před 10 lety +103

    A relative of mine, lived in the USA during WW2. One day during the war she met her friend for lunch, her friend ordered a big plate of food for herself, my relative told her 'do you realise what you have your plate could keep a family in England fed for a week, they have had their rations reduced', her friend replied ' they will just have to tighten their belts'. My relative felt Americans really had no idea how tough it was for British families especially the housewives.

    • @pamolson23
      @pamolson23 Před 9 lety +1

      *****
      perhaps

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu Před 9 lety +16

      ***** If Uk and France had given in and said nothing as you suggest when Poland was invaded by Germany , then Germany would have just carried on and invaded UK and France anyway. You do not seem to have any grasp of the reality of what it was like in those times.

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu Před 9 lety +9

      Michael Bond Some people come onto CZcams just to annoy others by placing stupid and thoughtless remarks, thus the name internet TROLLS. Best to ignore this person and others like him/her.

    • @Eszra
      @Eszra Před 7 lety +11

      I can agree with that. My Grandmother was a housewife at that time in America. All she ever says is how they would send care packages to help them out and everything. I told her about Rationing and she can't even remember what they did over here. But I told her about it over in Britain and she didn't see to care at all.
      Makes me sick.
      My god to think what I'd want to do. My neighbors right now have a open front yard. Together the victory garden we would make would be amazing! Would my Grandmother care, not a bit.

    • @queerdor
      @queerdor Před 7 lety +2

      that much suger a week holy shit

  • @JPKnapp-ro6xm
    @JPKnapp-ro6xm Před 2 lety +9

    The U.S. had rationing, too, but the amounts allowed were far more generous than in Britain. The only rationing that people really hated was red meat (chicken was not rationed at all) and gasoline (three gallons per week). The coffee ration came to about one cup per day.

    • @CrazyMazapan
      @CrazyMazapan Před rokem

      But then again, you didn't have Hitler at your doorstep, did you?

    • @jrt818
      @jrt818 Před rokem

      The coffee ration was so unpopular that it was the first to go unless you count SLICED bread.

  • @AA14CBF
    @AA14CBF Před rokem +2

    Watching this in Aug 2022. People might have to survive this again.

    • @knessing7681
      @knessing7681 Před rokem

      I wouldn't mind ... I generally have 2 meals sometimes 1 meal a day. This point system would be more than enough for me.

  • @claudioberriosromo7122

    Un abrazo grande desde Rancagua, Chile. Comienzo a conocer un poco mas de historia que me es desconocida.