stambourne
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Posts: 9
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In both WW1 and WW2 there were American Servicemen who didnt go home at the end. I personally know of a one armed antique dealer, back in the 50s, who was from WW1, and I know of 3 living locally to me in East Anglia 20 years ago, from WW2 (one army, 2 air forse). My son has a current friend, a lady who came here as a service wife, divorced her USAF husband, and married an Englishman. Has kids by both. Still uses the base facilities, still has US passport. I very much doubt if any of these folk are known to the authorities, and their descendants will have fun doing f.h.!
I suspect that others like the Polish Ladies Auxiliary Units may also have drifted gently into the UK, in the 1946 period. And what about the two Belgian Jewish ladies,(Flemish speakers) who came off a Leigh-on-Sea cockle boat during the Dunkirk evacuation, They were billeted on us for a few days still visibly sufferinbg from shell shock. I'll bet any money nobody was found to speak their language and take their deytails .. and so ...
trust this is sort of helpful Stafford
PS The Portobello Road antique market in 1955-60 was full of people "with no papers", Izzy's birth had in fact never been registered, so had no identity card, ration book, or anything, but managed somehow. His brother Manny had been and had it all, even paid tax!
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