Dear Angela
I received your letter a few days ago and I was very sorry that you have not had any letters. I wrote about May 20th and I think the next letter was July 5th, let me know if you get these letters.
Your description of the wharf at San Francisco reminds me of some of the small fishing villages on our coast. Just above the Tyne there are some of the most quaint and beautiful villages I have seen, Cullercoats, Tynemouth, North Shields and Whitley Bay. Most of the people are fisher folk and they sit on the stone walls mending their nets, or hanging the nets out to dry; at present most of the fishing vessels are on patrol work, mine sweeping and other dangerous jobs, but I hope the quiet of these places will return with the end of the war.
I had one week holiday this year, a friend and I had hoped to ride to the Lake District on his motor bike, but we couldn’t get enough petrol - so we had to travel by train. It was a grand to go to a place which hardly knew there was a war on and to be able to get up in a morning and not have to spend the day among the noise of machines and hammers. We stayed the week at a farm out on the fells, three miles from the nearest village. We had hoped for a quiet week - but we found three girls from Newcastle were staying at the farm - a quiet week was turned into a hectic one. Hay-making, milking, mountain climbing, rowing on the lake and making ourselves general nuisances around the farm, took up most of the week. I had a grand time and did not feel like starting work again; enclosed are two photos of Derwentwater and one of me on the farm gate (the snapshot is not very clear because the printing paper is very hard to obtain now).
Congratulations on your results at school, you seem to have done very well even in Chemistry which you have not studied long. Congratulations on winning your letter for athletics, I am afraid we have very little sport over here now as most of the tracks and playing fields have “suffered” in the “dig for victory” campaign. I think I said I was waiting for my results, they came out about a fortnight ago, I managed to win a prize and also a free studentship at College. The asterisks on the cutting are just for free studentships at evening classes, I will not need this with my studentship at College. I was quite pleased with the results as I will not have to don a boiler-suit, and get covered in grease and oil anymore. My subjects will be Chemistry, Physics, Maths, Engineering and Engineering Drawing which I will have to take in my Intermediate B.Sc. next summer.
I am sorry to disagree with you, but I do on the question of the Russians, if the Russians had not resisted I am certain we would have had twice as many air-raids and twice as many civilians killed. From another point of view, they are keeping him occupied on a very long front and giving heart to the countries under him. However it would not be freedom if we could not have our own views.
I saw the meeting of The President and The Premier on the screen, and every one in the cinema was moved by it.
I have found a correspondent for Diane, so she can expect a letter soon. A pal of mine who was in Coventry during the “blitz” described it in a letter to his correspondent, it was published in an American paper shortly afterwards. However as my descriptions are never very grand, you will get a better idea of the war from the papers than an engineer can give you.
Yours sincerely
Harold
