Drawing on diary extracts preserved through the Mass Observation Project, historian Professor Lucy Noakes has painted a vivid picture of what it was like to live through the end of the Second World War in her latest book.
The People’s Victory: VE Day Through the Eyes of Those Who Were There reveals that although many celebrated in the streets, many chose not to.
“The Mass Observation Project, which documented the everyday lives of people before, during and after the Second World War, shows us that many people spent the day at home, listening to celebrations on the radio,” said Professor Noakes.
“Others went out for picnics, bike rides and walks, whilst those who were bereaved, waiting for news of loved ones or not wanting to cause upset to friends and neighbours in that position, chose not to celebrate,” she added.
The book reconstructs VE Day and the weeks around it through the words of ordinary people collected through the Mass Observation Project. At its height, the Project had 1,000 writers – stretching from Penzance to Aberdeen and including miners, academics and housewives – and collected over 1 million individual diary entries between 1937 and 1960.
Professor Noakes, who is President of the , has been researching the experiences and memories of the Second World War for over two decades. Her previous research has often relied on the Mass Observation Project which she says “offers an unparalleled window into the feelings, thoughts, and experiences of British people in the mid-20th century.”