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National Service Call UP Papers 1952
I'm not sure if anyone is interested to see these, some of my late father's National Service, Army, call up papers from 1952 which landed on the doormat when he was 18 years old, during the Korean war. Presumably there was also a form that had to be filled in and handed/sent in.
The 2 pages of notes are on both sides of the papers but just look what happened if you tried to get out of National Service by making a false statement, 3 months in prison and or a £50 fine.
I assume that my father was driven to the medical by car as my family owned a car, hence the travel permit is unused.
The result of the medical was the highest level of disability due to injuries received in WW2 and unfit for any military service. This didn't automatically mean exemption from National Service, just that he was told to return in 6 months for a second medical which had the same results and the army were satisfied that they didn't require the services of my father.
If my father had just ignored the call up papers below he would have been arrested by the police and sent to prison. When he responded to them he was fully expecting to join the army and serve his country in Korea.
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Last edited by Flying10uk; 10-11-2021 at 07:15 PM.
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10-11-2021 07:09 PM
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My grandmother wouldn't give me my Grandfather's WW2 medical "unfit for service" paperwork, and it was over 20 years after he passed away...
I will have to find out where it went.
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Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
I'm not sure if anyone is interested to see these,
Yep.
Thanks for sharing.
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Originally Posted by
Lee Enfield
My grandmother wouldn't give me my Grandfather's WW2 medical "unfit for service" paperwork, and it was over 20 years after he passed away...
I would imagine that she finds it upsetting.
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Originally Posted by
Lee Enfield
My grandmother wouldn't give me my Grandfather's WW2 medical
my grandmother was the youngest of 6 kids and had 5 much older brothers. One of her brothers was not able to be drafted for medical reasons. I vaguely recall the story she told me when I was pretty young that he lived in self-isolated self-inflicted shame until he died young from colon cancer. People took being declared "unfit" to share the burden of their country very seriously by her generation. I'm perplexed at the contrast between grandma's generation, and the rampant draft dodgers amongst their offspring during Vietnam.
I haven't seen anyone write about it, but I saw first hand shortly after Sept. 11, 2001 that the problem still persisted. There were many active duty persons who just up and quit and went home at the news there was a fight coming or we were deploying...they only signed up for the college money. Is it that these things happened more rarely during WW2? Or that it's hushed and forgotten because it doesn't meet the mantra of "the greatest generation"? I think the former is true and not the latter. The willingness of SO MANY to sacrifice SO MUCH is part of the historical record, and in stark contrast to the reality of the present, where SO FEW are willing to serve at all, let alone sacrifice anything, and especially so amongst our so called "elite" citizenry.
That's my rant for the day anyway. Thanks for sharing your documents.
Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
If my father had just ignored the call up papers below he would have been arrested by the police and sent to prison.
Would the same thing have happened if he refused vaccination? Kidding....mostly
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Originally Posted by
ssgross
...I'm perplexed at the contrast between grandma's generation, and the rampant draft dodgers amongst their offspring during Vietnam.
...
This is around the time our country went from "we" to "me", everything has gone downhill since...
Russ
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Most of it has to do with the decades of brainwashing in the colleges
"good night Chesty, Wherever You Are"
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There was never any question of my father not responding to his "call up papers" and he was fully expecting to be accepted by the army. However it is quite understandable why the army didn't want a soldier with serious blast damage to both ears, was deaf as a consequence, and suffered what today is called PTSD, resulting in recurring nightmares and waking up screaming among the symptoms. There was never any sense of shame of not being accepted for National Service.
When the Civil Defence was reformed in the 1950's/60's to deal with the after affects of Nuclear war my father volunteered as a Civil Defence Ambulance Driver. I still have various bits of literature of the post war Civil Defence and it appears very much a case of a "cut and paste" the WW2 Civil Defence into the 1950's/60's and I rather think that it was more a case of a public relations exercise than any hope of being able to deal with the after effects of Nuclear war.
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Got out of national service camps by joining permanent force. Never regretted my 30 years service.
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