Frances: The Tragic Bride (3 page)

BOOK: Frances: The Tragic Bride
2.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Frances’s parents, Elsie and Frank Shea, had been married for nearly four years when they moved into the tiny terraced house in Ormsby Street, which lies just behind the long, meandering Kingsland Road, the main thoroughfare running some two and a half miles from Shoreditch Church up to the leafier surrounds of Stoke Newington. With a four-year-old son, Frank, born just a month after war had been declared and a new baby on the way, for the couple, who’d both left school at 14 to seek employment in the many thousands of factories and workshops that crowded the nearby area, it was a relief to be rehoused in the tiny, shabby little house. It had nothing much to commend it, though – other than that the bombs had missed it.

Like many young courting couples facing the ‘will it, won’t it happen’ uncertainty of the looming threat of war with Germany, Frank and Elsie had married hastily in July 1938 at Shoreditch Register Office.

Elsie Wynn was a twenty-one-year-old skilled seamstress and Frank Shea a woodworker aged twenty-six when they opted to join forces. Both had always lived in the locality; Frank grew up in Hoxton, the youngest of a big Irish family, headed by his dad Joseph, a shoe salesman.

Hoxton today is one of central London’s most fashionable areas, with trendy new loft apartment blocks and smart cafes and bars. Yet for much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries it was one of the roughest areas in Britain, overcrowded, crime ridden, its tiny streets of pubs and pickpockets virtually overwhelmed by the huge number of small factories and workshops that had been set up there in the late nineteenth century.

Elsie’s family had lived in nearby Shoreditch, a shade closer to the heart of the city itself, and slightly less rough than the mean streets of Hoxton. Elsie’s father, Robert, was a driver. ‘Always tell people you live in Shoreditch, not Hoxton, it’s much nicer,’ Elsie would frequently remind her kids as they grew up – low-level postcode snobbery that she’d probably absorbed as a child, but which at the same time hinted at her yearning for respectability and social acceptance. Tragically, this was destined to elude her in ways she could never have imagined.

Elsie had come from a broken home. Her father left the family for another woman, a source of much family bitterness amongst the Wynns in later years. Yet by the time she fell for Frank Shea, a quiet, good-looking young man, Elsie was a very smartly turned out, attractive dark-eyed brunette, who was a good physical match, at least, for the equally sharp-suited, slightly built Frank.

Once married, the young couple lived briefly in Hemsworth Street, Hoxton, then found themselves on the move again to nearby Malvern Road, Hackney, after baby Frank arrived in October 1939. Then came the devastating effects of the German bombing raids of the Blitz in 1940, when London and the East End were continuously bombed for fifty-seven nights from September through to November. This ferocious attack on Londoners was followed by even more continuous bombing raids, from March until mid-May 1941, which left a pall of thick smoke hanging permanently over the city. Everywhere you went, London was burning. The fear of annihilation never stopped. It just went on and on.

Many thousands of homes were left without gas, water or electricity after the bombings, and Malvern Road was right in the heart of the bombing of Hackney, so at around the time Elsie discovered she was pregnant for a second time, the Sheas considered themselves lucky to be rehoused in Ormsby Street.

This was to be their family home for nearly thirty years, right up until the time when the houses in the area were finally demolished in the late 1960s as part of the major-slum clearance programme that took place in parts of East London. At that point, the Sheas were moved, along with their neighbours, to new homes nearby.

By then, however, moving to a brand new home with all mod cons held little comfort for the Sheas. The fabric of their lives had been torn asunder by a gut-wrenching emotional wrecking ball as powerful as the worst of the Luftwaffe’s assaults on London: their only daughter’s brief life as the girlfriend, then wife of Reggie Kray was over. And the tiny Hoxton thoroughfare where she’d grown up, just less than a mile away from the Kray family’s home, ‘Fort Vallance’ in Vallance Road, Bethnal Green, had been the setting for some of the strangest, most poignant scenes in the history of Frances Shea’s troubled relationship with Reggie, the twin who was so determined to claim her as his own – in life and then beyond.

Elsie was hardly a social climber by today’s standards. But even as a young wartime mum, she always clung to her hopes and dreams, even though she was desperately struggling to cope with rationing, bombs and looking after little Frank – a good looking child with melting chocolate brown eyes and an endearing manner – as well as having a husband away in the services (Frank Senior had signed up to join the Fleet Air Arm just after war was declared). Somehow, her dreams helped her through the worst times.

She was aspirational, at a time when day-to-day aspiration was in very short supply. Elsie desperately wanted a better, cleaner, brighter world for her family when the war finally ended. What mother didn’t allow herself the occasional dream of better days ahead in the midst of all they were living through?

Elsie had been lucky enough to give birth to Frank, named Frank Brian, in a proper maternity ward, at the City of London Maternity Hospital in City Road, a hospital later to be destroyed by bombing raids in 1940. As the war went on and medical/nursing resources had to be deployed elsewhere around the country for the war effort, home births became the norm, with overstretched midwives on bikes wobbling their way through the rubble-strewn smoky streets. They were shakily coping with the ever-present threat of death or injury, helping bring life into the world right in the midst of the war, sometimes to the accompaniment of gunfire, explosion or falling debris. And there were times when even the home birth became impossible – history records that some women even gave birth while sheltering in the London Underground during air raids.

Frances arrived at Ormsby Street on 23 September 1943. There is no record of bombing in the area around Kingsland Road for that week, and by then everyone was fervently hoping that the worst of the bombing was over. In fact, the intermittent bombing of London, day and night, was far from over: the Luftwaffe dropped 30 tons of bombs over Battersea, Ilford, Hampstead and Woodford, Essex two weeks later on 7 October and the following day, killing thirty-five people and injuring many more.

Bombs or no bombs, Elsie wanted her baby daughter baptised. With everyone living with death and destruction all around them, baptism was popular for newborns. Not only did it mean a church marriage in adulthood, it also meant burial in consecrated ground. And so the three-week-old baby, named Frances Elsie, was baptised at St Chad’s Church, Nichols Square, just round the corner from Ormsby Street on 17 October 1943 by Father Henry Wincott, who presided over St Chad’s parishioners throughout the war years.

It was a happy day for the Sheas; the baby gurgled contentedly in her mum’s arms throughout the short ceremony. In fact, just forty-eight hours after she was born, Elsie noted with some satisfaction that her little girl was smiling up at her: a moment in time she’d often proudly recall in the years ahead.

Frank’s period in the services saw him working as a veneer preparer (helping to make wooden propellers for aircraft) in the Fleet Air Arm and fortunately he didn’t wind up being sent off to serve overseas. Yet there were still periods of separation for the couple, with Frank returning briefly on forty-eight-hour leave to find his wife just about coping with the demands of a small baby and a lively four-year-old son running around.

Money, of course, was tight: Elsie, as a mum of two small children, was not compelled to register for war work, and she could work from home as an outworker, making clothes on the kitchen table – if she could manage it. But the news in 1943 that servicemen’s wives were eligible to claim for a weekly War Service Grant of £3 a week would have been very welcome in Ormsby Street. Frank’s Fleet Air Arm pay would have been less than this, around £1–2 for a seven-day week, after deductions.

Like the other families living in cramped housing that didn’t boast a cellar or basement area, the Sheas had to keep an Anderson air-raid shelter in their tiny backyard. Named after Sir John Anderson, Home Secretary during the first year of the war, the six-foot six-inch by four-foot six-inch shelter, which measured just six feet at the highest point of the roof, was made from curved sheets of corrugated iron, clamped together and bolted to steel rails, and then dug into the soil to a depth of four feet. Frequently, neighbours got together to help each other put up these shelters, provided free by the authorities to families of modest means (those living on less than £5 a week) to shelter in when the air-raid warnings started.

The shelter was damp, cold and cramped. Elsie grew to hate it. Even if you attempted to heat it by using a lit candle underneath an upturned flowerpot, it was still dank and uncomfortable.

She hated it so much that there were times when the air-raid warning went and Elsie, little Frank and baby Frances remained inside their tiny house, sheltering under the sturdy wooden kitchen table until the all-clear siren, with the baby snugly wrapped up inside the little case that contained the much-loathed – and fortunately never used – gas mask, issued to everyone in Britain just before war was declared. During World War One, mustard and other toxic gases had been used against troops by both sides, causing terrible casualties, and there were initially considerable fears that in Word War Two the Germans would try to attack civilians in this way.

People always said: ‘Oh, things ’ave to get bad before they get better.’ And by the time little Frances reached her first birthday, it looked as if they were right: D-Day, the Allied landings in Europe in June 1944, meant that Hitler was on the run.

Yet despite this, as well as the constant rumours that the war would be over later in the year, the war from the air continued, giving Londoners more even more grief than they’d have ever believed possible. This was thanks to Hitler’s secret weapon of terror, the buzz bomb, or flying bomb, a very early version of what we now call a cruise missile. A pilotless super powerful aircraft, called the V-1, it was launched from the French or Dutch coasts with over one ton of explosive power. This could be devastating in urban areas, ripping off roofs, blowing out doors, wrenching out windowpanes and shattering glass in every direction. People’s ears would nervously be attuned to their arrival, initially heralded by a distant humming sound, growing ever louder to become a distinct rattling noise. But then, chillingly, the engine would cut out and there would be total silence – for just fifteen seconds – before a massive explosion wreaked havoc and destruction all around. Even worse, these weapons weren’t at all predictable. Sometimes one could be heard getting closer and closer, only to inexplicably veer away, then to return just at the point people believed it had gone. It played hell with people’s nerves.

Many Londoners insisted that the effect of these weapons was worse than the terrible times they’d already experienced during the Blitz. This was because these lethal unmanned robot planes were so much harder to accept than an aircraft with a man inside, who was risking his own life in order to destroy yours.

The first V-1 struck London just a week after D-Day, on 13 June 1944, landing in Bethnal Green’s Grove Road and making 266 people homeless. At first it was believed the damage was caused by a piloted plane that had crashed, but where was the pilot? A few days later the Home Secretary, Herbert Morrison, reluctantly made an announcement that London was being attacked by pilotless planes. During that summer of 1944, a million Londoners left for the country for a second time. Many had only recently returned to the city, believing the worst of the bombing to be over. Now they were on the run once more.

Deeper bombproof shelters opened at Underground stations in north and south London. What people didn’t know, thankfully, was that the government feared these new weapons of horror might be used to deliver chemical or biological charges.

Then, between September 1944 and March 1945, more than 1,300 lethal V-1s and V-2s (a supersonic guided rocket with a two-ton warhead, against which there was no practical defence) rained down all over London, killing 2,500 and seriously injuring nearly 4,000. When they stopped – if you’d come through without loss – the April spring mornings had never seemed sweeter.

Elsie was tempted to flee the city. Not surprisingly, morale had plummeted in London to previously unknown depths. People’s spirits were at their lowest ebb. Yet they all stayed put, Elsie gratefully taking the free cod liver oil and orange juice supplied by the authorities for the children’s health, queuing each day outside what was left of the local shops with the baby, with a supply of newspaper in her basket to wrap up her purchases. Stoically, the Sheas and their neighbours struggled through those final months of the war. They were longing for an end to the rationing of everything (including soap), having to use the tinned powdered eggs, and the meals of kidney, hearts or liver that so often turned up on the table (offal was never rationed, so women cooked it frequently).

By the time VE Day came, in May 1945, people were relieved but totally exhausted. They’d got through intact. You could envisage a future without bombs, noise and the terrors of war. Elsie wondered if perhaps there would be work for her in a local factory once the kids were a bit older. Little Frank was scheduled to start primary school that autumn.

Frank Senior was due to be demobbed, and like all those other ex-servicemen pouring out of the armed forces, he’d have to find something, somehow. The demob payment of £60 was welcome – but it only went so far. Life in Ormsby Street was still tough in every way. But peace of a sort had arrived.

Under a mile away, in Bethnal Green, the day-to-day lives of an extraordinary pair of twelve-year-old identical twins also settled down somewhat after the upheavals of war.

BOOK: Frances: The Tragic Bride
2.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

F#ckGirl (F#ckGirl #1) by Sheila Michelle
TUN-HUANG by YASUSHI INOUE
The Crescent Spy by Michael Wallace
Sharkman by Steve Alten
Release by Rebecca Lynn
SIX by Ker Dukey
Forgotten Dreams by Eleanor Woods
Lost Girls by Robert Kolker
Point of Origin by Rebecca Yarros