A successful evacuation evacuation was evaluated to prevent people from being killed or injured as a result of the heavy bombing of the big city during the war. The government transferred 1,474,000 school-age children, mothers and children, disabled people, teachers, and pregnant women from vulnerable areas to rural areas. In 1939, 2 million people evacuated personally, leaving the city with friends and relatives. The first evacuation took effect on September 1, but many people returned to their homes for "false warfare", but this was a waste.
Evaluating the Success of Children's Evacuation in the UK's Major Cities during World War II Before discussing how to evacuate successfully, the first question to ask is how to measure success. Evacuation may have been successful, but others have failed. Some social groups may then benefit from it, others may get worse. In a sense, evacuation is a huge success. - Early withdrawal of British children from major British cities in the early World War II There were many reasons to evacuate children from Britain's major cities at the beginning of the Second World War. The main purpose of evacuation was to protect children from German bombs. The government is concerned that the bombing in major cities is very close and they want the country to prepare for this danger.
A successful evacuation evacuation was evaluated to prevent people from being killed or injured as a result of the heavy bombing of the big city during the war. The government transferred 1,474,000 school-age children, mothers and children, disabled people, teachers, and pregnant women from vulnerable areas to rural areas. In 1939, 2 million people evacuated personally, leaving the city with friends and relatives. - Evacuation is a great success with many factors that contribute to the success of evacuation. The main factor is the amount of life saved by evacuation. Without evacuation it turned out that more people were killed by electric shock (actually they were just killed)