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Seventy-five years ago on 16th July 1937 a party of 31 school children arrived at High Wycombe railway station.  These were no ordinary visitors but refugees from the Spanish Civil War who with more than 3,800 others had been evacuated by ship from the besieged city of Bilbao in northern Spain two months earlier.  At first the entire contingent had been housed under canvas in a transit camp just outsideSouthampton but it was always the intention to disperse the children to more permanent accommodation around the country.  The initiative for setting up and financing these colonies (as they were called) was left to the organising ability and generosity of local communities.  One of those which took up the challenge was High Wycombe.

In its edition of 11th June 1937, the Bucks Free Press carried an article headlined “Basque Children in Bucks?” which revealed that work was already under way to find a property suitable to house twenty refugee children in the High Wycombe area and raise enough money to provide for their welfare.  At a public meeting on the following Wednesday, Capt Macnamara, MP for Chelmsford and one of the secretaries of the Committee for Spanish Relief, explained that the Committee did not want to lodge the children with individual families but keep them together as a group to preserve their Spanish identity.  His colleague from the Committee, Lord Addison, appealed to local pride declaring, “I cannot imagine a finer place than this for them.  Bucks is glorious country and I can well believe that when they go back to Spain, they will take throughout their lives a memory of this delightful county and of the British people who have helped them”.

Outdoor lessons

The problem of finding a suitable property was soon solved when the Town Council agreed to lend the redundant smallpox isolation hospital in Booker.  This building was on the site now occupied by Beechlands Court on the corner of Barry Close and Cressex   Road.  Volunteers worked hard repairing the roof, lime-washing the walls and installing cooking equipment.  Boy Scouts and girls from Wycombe High School cleared the grounds and put up tents.  These were necessary because there was insufficient room to house all the children in the existing buildings.

After they arrived at the railway station, the children were driven in coaches to their new home. Most of them had grown up in apartment blocks in urban Bilbao and greeted the prospect of camping outdoors once again with dismay.  However by mid-August when the Liberal MP Wilfred Roberts inspected the camp, a regular daily routine had been established with three sessions of school lessons, organised games, and swimming on Saturdays.

Hut building in progress

After torrential rain in mid-September the tents had to be replaced.  Ursula Coulon, the camp foster-mother, herself a refugee from the war in Spain, explained to a visiting Bucks Free Press reporter that it was chilly at night and difficult to keep clothing and bedding dry.  There was no artificial lighting or heating even in the brick-built hospital building.  By the time a meeting convened at the Guildhall two months later to hear an address by Mrs Wood of the Committee for Spanish Relief, these problems had been remedied and wooden huts were now in use.

The meeting also had to consider the vexed question of repatriation.  Less than a month after the children’s arrival at Southampton, Bilbao had fallen to the Nationalists and the clamour for their return to Spain began.  Those, like the MP for South Bucks, Sir Alfred Knox, who believed that the refugees should never have been offered a safe haven inEngland, argued that they should be returned forthwith.  Other opponents argued that the outpouring of charity and goodwill towards the Basque children was diverting attention away from the plight of British children living in poverty.  The Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin had had a more down-to-earth objection, “The climate will not suit them”, he warned.  Mrs Wood made it clear that the Committee would not be repatriating children unless they received authentic requests from their parents and that as a result the children would probably return in small groups rather than en masse.

At the beginning of the new school year in September 1938, it was decided to allow some of the Basque children to attend local schools.  Six began joining classes at Booker Elementary School in the afternoons, while four of the older girls joined Wycombe High School one afternoon a week as guest pupils.

Ursula Coulon with ‘Peachey’ one of the refugee children
‘Pop’ Day with Peachey who is about to leave for home

After the outbreak of the Second World War, the Committee came under pressure to speed up the repatriation process and by 1940 only six of the seventy colonies were still open.  The Basque children vacated the Booker Colony and were replaced by troops training in bomb disposal.  However not everyone associated with the camp left Booker for good.   Ursula Coulon married one of her colleagues at the camp; a social worker named Tom (known as ‘Pop’) Day and together with her children they moved into a house on Cressex Road where they remained for some  years as a living link with a fascinating episode in Booker’s past.

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Further information about the Basque refugees can be found at www.basquechildren.org