Survivors of the WWII Blitz, now in their 90s and beyond, recount deeply moving childhood experiences in the documentary Children of the Blitz. Director Jack Warrender captures these urgent testimonies before they fade, as 101-year-old Dorothea Barron notes with a wry chuckle: “So few of us are left—we’re all popping our clogs quite frequently.”
Poignant Lifelong Traumas
One survivor, Patsy Moneypenny, who passed away after filming, demonstrated her spirit at 90 by tap-dancing in her kitchen. A bomb crashed through her family’s Belfast home, leaving everything in flames. “It must have been horrific for my mum trying to get me out,” she recalled. The blast rendered her mute for years and prompted a lifelong habit of rubbing cloth pieces to soothe her nerves—she couldn’t sleep without it.
These details highlight the enduring scars of wartime terror. The film steers clear of familiar Blitz imagery, like St. Paul’s survival or royal visits, instead using maps marked with bombing hotspots to illustrate the devastation.
Dramatic and Amusing Memories
Ninety-two-year-old Ted Bush describes returning from a cinema outing to see George Formby with his parents, only to find their house and half the street obliterated.
Siblings John Cheetham and Cynthia Fowler from Hull playfully argue over their Anderson shelter’s details. John insists corrugated iron surrounded the door—he cut his ear on it.
A Mother’s Tragic Loss
Ninety-two-year-old Jean Whitfield shares the saddest tale: after a bombing night, a relative took her for a walk. Moments later, a time-bomb detonated as her mother hung washing in the communal yard. Jean visits the common grave where her mother and others lie. “I think it’s so sad,” she says, “that nobody cared enough to give her a proper grave.”
These stories preserve fading memories from post-war generations. Efforts continue to honor victims, ensuring no grave remains unmarked.




