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Eileen Younghusband with her award-winning book 'One Woman's War'. |
Showing posts with label WAAF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WAAF. Show all posts
Friday, 31 May 2013
EILEEN APPEARS IN THE SOUTH WALES ECHO!
Hot off her success at The People's Book Prize awards ceremony and her British Empire Medal (BEM), Eileen finds herself getting some well-deserved recognition for her achievments in today's edition of the South Wales Echo:
Labels:
article,
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autobiography,
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BEM,
British Empire Medal,
candy jar books,
cardiff,
eileen younghusband,
filter room,
newspaper,
one woman's war,
publisher,
the people's book prize,
V2 rockets,
WAAF,
WW2
Monday, 22 April 2013
EILEEN APPEARS IN THE TIMES
Author Eileen Younghusband appeared in the Times newspaper today in an article that talks about her time as a WW2 WAAF officer as well as her upcoming book 'Men I Have Known' which gives an account of the numerous interesting men she's met over the course of her life.
Eileen is no stranger to publicity having previously appeared on BBC Breakfast and BBC Radio Wales. She will also soon be featuring on BBC's The One Show where she will be demonstrating how she used her keen maths skills to track Hitler's deadly V2 rockets.
You can read the full article online (via subscription) here.
www.candyjarbooks.co.uk
Eileen is no stranger to publicity having previously appeared on BBC Breakfast and BBC Radio Wales. She will also soon be featuring on BBC's The One Show where she will be demonstrating how she used her keen maths skills to track Hitler's deadly V2 rockets.
You can read the full article online (via subscription) here.
www.candyjarbooks.co.uk
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
EILEEN TALKS ABOUT HER VALUES ON RADIO WALES
Eileen has appeared on Radio Wales, talking to Phil George about the values that helped her as an officer in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force in World War Two.
You can hear the broadcast via iPlayer here.
www.candy-jar.co.uk
Labels:
11 group filter room,
age,
book,
broadcast,
candy jar books,
eileen younghusband,
Fighter Command,
george,
history,
one woman's war,
phil,
radio wales,
values,
WAAF
Friday, 9 November 2012
ITV TRACK EILEEN
Eileen featured in her very own documentary last night (8/11/2012) on ITV Wales.
Welsh Heroes of World War II: Tracking the Enemy depicted Eileen's work in the incredible Filter Rooms, part of the ingenious RADAR chain, during World War II as she tracked planes and incoming bombs over the skies of Britain. Using just their mathematical talents, Eileen and the other WAAF girls were responsible for knowing exactly what was going on in the air. It was their filtered information that determined both the location of airborne aircraft and which were friend or foe.
Tracking the Enemy went beyond the Filter Rooms of World War II in its 25 minute running time and introduced Eileen to the modern system of Air Defence now in place. When asked if she would like to get back to work Eileen replied 'If I could be twenty-one and do it all over again, I would'.
A truly inspiring documentary, Tracking the Enemy has helped to highlight the vital work done by the young women of the WAAF who have now been honoured at the home of the Royal Air Force, Bentley Priory, with a stunning stained glass window. For more information on the programme and for a sneak preview of the show, please click here
Eileen's book One Woman's War is currently in the final stages of its transition from page to screen. The one hour documentary tells Eileen's story of her (so far) 91 years, covering everything from her childhood to her marriage to dealing scrap metal for a company in Spain. A truly remarkable life, One Woman's War is due for release in December*.
Watch this space for the One Woman's War trailer coming soon.
*date of releases subject to change.
Welsh Heroes of World War II: Tracking the Enemy depicted Eileen's work in the incredible Filter Rooms, part of the ingenious RADAR chain, during World War II as she tracked planes and incoming bombs over the skies of Britain. Using just their mathematical talents, Eileen and the other WAAF girls were responsible for knowing exactly what was going on in the air. It was their filtered information that determined both the location of airborne aircraft and which were friend or foe.
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Eileen speaking on ITV Wales |
The commemorative window at Bentley priory |
Eileen's book One Woman's War is currently in the final stages of its transition from page to screen. The one hour documentary tells Eileen's story of her (so far) 91 years, covering everything from her childhood to her marriage to dealing scrap metal for a company in Spain. A truly remarkable life, One Woman's War is due for release in December*.
Watch this space for the One Woman's War trailer coming soon.
*date of releases subject to change.
Labels:
Air Traffic Control,
aircraft,
bentley priory,
candy jar books,
eileen younghusband,
filter room,
itv wales,
not an ordinary life,
one woman's war,
radar,
radar chain,
v2 rocket,
WAAF,
World War II
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
STAINED GLASS HERO
Eileen
was thrilled to be involved. Her book One Woman's War helped to make the
public more aware of the importance of the Dowding System and is partially
responsible for the creation of the window. She said: “Together with a fellow WAAF
Officer I helped with the design of the window. This took me back to those dark
days of war. As I removed the Union flag covering the brass plaque with my name
on it, I thought of all who had worked with me and I admit there were tears in
my eyes.”
The
work of the Filter Room women was kept secret for thirty years. Eileen's book One
Woman’s War reveals the truth about these forgotten wartime women, and has
recently been nominated for The People's Book Prize. Winston Churchill
stressed the little-known importance of this work. He is famous for saying:
“All the ascendancy of the Hurricanes and Spitfires would have been fruitless
but for the system known as the Dowding System.”
A
documentary about Eileen's experiences will be shown on ITV Wales in early
November.
Eileen
is currently moving forward with her next title, Men I have Known, about
the men she has met throughout her life, ranging from Winston Churchill to
Dylan Thomas and the tyrant, Idi Amin. It is due to be published by Candy Jar
Books later this year.
Labels:
11 group filter room,
battle of britain,
bentley priory,
blitz,
dowding system,
radar,
top secret,
WAAF,
window
Wednesday, 18 April 2012
CALL TO ARMS

As such, they are looking for a well-known woman with a mother or grandmother in the WAAF. Are you an actor, presenter or journalist with such a background?
Or are you a WAAF veteran who has a famous relation in the media. If you can help please contact Dina Mufti on 02920322143 or 07976 599212
Labels:
actor,
employment,
Fighter Command,
job,
journalist,
presenter,
WAAF,
World War II,
WW2
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
ONE WOMAN'S WAR - COMING SOON ON DVD!
Candy Jar is pleased to announce the forthcoming DVD, based on the critically acclaimed memoir One Woman's War by Eileen Younghusband.
Eileen Younghusband (90) was just 18 when she joined the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF). She quickly demonstrated her keen intellect and mathematical skills, playing a crucial role in Fighter Command’s underground Filter Room.
Working grueling shifts under enormous pressure she and her companions worked tirelessly, tracking the swarms of enemy aircraft that sought to break the British resolve. She even had the dubious honour of detecting the first of Hitler’s devastating V2 rockets as it fell on an unsuspecting London.
In 2011, Candy Jar Books published Eileen's memoir to critical and commercial success.
Now, this DVD goes beyond the book and delves deeper into Eileen's wartime experiences as she gives a frank and revealing interview about her experiences leading up to and during the Second World War.
Running Time: Approx. 60mins
Format: PAL, Widescreen (16:9)
Classification: Exempt
The One Woman's War DVD will be available this spring. To pre-order your copy of the DVD, please go here. Any orders made prior to release with benefit from priority dispatch.
www.onewomanswar.co.uk
www.candy-jar.co.uk
Tuesday, 27 March 2012
NOT AN ORDINARY LIFE - NOW ON KINDLE!
Candy Jar is proud to announce that Eileen's first book, Not An Ordinary Life, is now available via Kindle.
From London suburbs to French au pair, city clerk to secret War Room, V2 detection to VE-Day, concentration camp guide to language teacher, pig breeder to busy hotelier and scrap metal Queen—then bachelor’s degree in her eighty-seventh year! This autobiographical book tells of how changing times brought historical events into the life of an extraordinary woman.
Since this book was first released in 2009, Eileen has gone on to write 'One Woman's War', a critically acclaimed account of her time serving in the WAAF in World War Two. For this electronic version, she has brought her life story up to date by adding a new chapter, writing about her experiences of becoming a celebrity author at the age of 90!
You can buy the Kindle version of Not An Ordinary Life here.
Candy Jar Books
One Woman's War
From London suburbs to French au pair, city clerk to secret War Room, V2 detection to VE-Day, concentration camp guide to language teacher, pig breeder to busy hotelier and scrap metal Queen—then bachelor’s degree in her eighty-seventh year! This autobiographical book tells of how changing times brought historical events into the life of an extraordinary woman.
Since this book was first released in 2009, Eileen has gone on to write 'One Woman's War', a critically acclaimed account of her time serving in the WAAF in World War Two. For this electronic version, she has brought her life story up to date by adding a new chapter, writing about her experiences of becoming a celebrity author at the age of 90!
You can buy the Kindle version of Not An Ordinary Life here.
Candy Jar Books
One Woman's War
Labels:
au pair,
autobiography,
eileen younghusband,
extraordinary,
french,
historical,
history,
kindle,
not an ordinary life,
one woman's war,
pig farmer,
scrap metal,
v2,
VE Day,
WAAF,
WW2
Monday, 9 January 2012
HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYONE
Looking forward to a new set of adventures in 2012 - already I have heard from the Association of Flight Controllers, the current name for Officers doing the work of Filterers in WW2 that I have been made an Honorary Member. I am thrilled with this honour and look forward to meeting modern day practioners of the art of calculating and vectoring ai craft. I am also ecstatic to learn that the proposed museum at Bentley Priory, the headquarters of Fighteer Command and the air defence of Great Britain in WW2, is not only going to recreate the Filter Room as used in the 1940s but there is a proposal to create a memorial window to the WAAF who served in Radar, Ops Rooms and Filter Rooms. This means we have to raise up to £10,000 for its preparation but I know we will do it. Any ex-Filter Room personnel who read this blog are welcome to contact me at le.croissette@virgin.net if they are willing to support us.
It is time that the vital work behind the scenes done by members of the WAAF was recognised.
Eileen
It is time that the vital work behind the scenes done by members of the WAAF was recognised.
Eileen
Friday, 24 June 2011
OUT OF THE BLUE!
Every day something new happens, building up to my birthday on July 4th when my second book "One Woman's War" published by Candy Jar Books is launched in a superb hardback version. I look at the post each morning and wonder what is the next surprise. Yesterday I received three letters - one from a WAAF who had served during the war as an Instrument Repairer, a vital job and the second from a Squadron Leader who had become a Filterer Officer like me, and it transpires that I was his training Officer at RAF Bawdsey when he first joined up. He went on to serve in Filter Rooms overseas including India, Ceylon and the Cocos Keeling Islands. Speaking subsequently to him by phone, the third piece of news came from a Wing Commander Bomber Commander. I wonder where the next surprise is coming from?
Eileen
Eileen
Monday, 20 June 2011
V2 AT THE FILTER ROOM ROCKET DESK
Out of the blue I have received a letter from a WAAF airwoman who worked with me in the 11 Group Filter Room and who knew me by my maiden name Eileen Le Croissette! It shows how we kept secrets - I never knew about this secret operation - The Rocket Room.- This is her letter:-
Innsworth Lane, Glos;Leighton Buzzard Plotter School
Mary -------------
WAAF 1941-1946 Cpl 448876
Innsworth Lane, Glos;
1941-3: 12 Group Watnall
1943-6: 11 Group, Stanmore, Bentley Priory, down the Hole, then moved to Hill House
20th June 2011
Dear Mrs Younghusband
It has been a great pleasure to read your “One Woman’s War”. Your letter to the press “Filtered Out” thrilled my Filter friends. “Ops” always had the publicity, but you highlighted the frantic work on the Filter Room table, describing the Radar Chain, and how the system was unknown.
To discover you were S/O Le Croissette was amazing, remembering you at Stanmore, down the “Hole” and at Hill House. As a plotter, I did most duties from Teller, Filter Office’s Clerk for Y Service, plotting on all stations - Beachy Head on D-Day, with the mass raid of 1,000 A/C.
So far, nothing has been written about the Rocket Office, my last duty. Why? This small office built onto the rear of the Filter Room, manned by two, sometimes three officers plus one NCO, contained a long switchboard of phone lines, alarm bells, a place for the recorder; on the side, just enough room for a large map to trace the firing points of each “incident” to landing, and final Home Office report of casualties and damage. The first V2 on September 8th.
The Office was manned from about August 20th. I cannot remember the names of the officers, except Betty Wix (666!) and Pat Robbins (daughter of the novelist, Denise Robbins).
After much waiting around, the officers used to go up to the Rest Room for a break, having given me strict instructions to sound the alarm if anything happened. Alone, I was terrified every time a call came, but many were for Pat Robbins, from an American officer called HAM! Pat produced the humour of the team, often asking for advice and suggestions on the current story she was writing.
Thursday, 16 June 2011
SCHOOL REPORT

They listened avidly to my description of the job of the Filter Room, the lynchpin of the Radar system. When I showed them a film of the work done at Fighter Command Headquarters' Filter Room, they were engrossed.
At the end they asked over twenty questions. "Had I met Anne Frank?" "No," I said. "Did I ever see Winston Churchill." "Yes," was my answer. "Did we have to be good at Maths to work there?" And the questions continued... I spent one of my most interesting and enjoyable two hours with them. The culmination was finding in my letter box two days ago an envelope containing twenty-nine hand-made cards from these children with drawings on the front and delightful messages inside. Here a few samples of these delightful children's efforts.
www.onewomanswar.co.uk

Thursday, 14 April 2011
THE STORY OF A COLLABORATEUR
Last night, April 13th, my sixty-five year-long quest came to an end. In May, 1938, aged only seventeen, I went to Contrexeville in the Vosges to teach English to three young children. Their father was a right-wing member of the Chambre des Deputes, the French Parliament.
By August, it seemed war was imminent - it was the Munich Crisis - and he was called up. I was immediately sent home to avoid being caught in a war zone. Eventually at the end of World War 2, when I returned from service as a WAAF Officer, I thought about those children and wondered what had happened to them. For many years I searched without success to trace them, then through the internet I found their father had joined the Petain government and was labelled a collaborateur. I learned he had escaped to Germany in 1944 and then had managed to leave the country and found sanctuary first in the Argentine and finally in Uraguay where he died in 1968. In France, all his possessions were taken from him and his name blackened. But what happened to the children?
Last night Helene, the youngest of the three, telephoned me from Geneva and told me their amazing story. A French writer friend of mine, Genevieve Moulard, had managed to track her down through the Mayor of Contrexeville. Having been contacted by her, Helene immediately phoned me. She talked for an hour and a half in excellent English relating an amazing tale of escape, of anger, of bitterness and of danger. The life story of that family is food for a novel. Perhaps my next venture!!!
www.onewomanswar.co.uk
By August, it seemed war was imminent - it was the Munich Crisis - and he was called up. I was immediately sent home to avoid being caught in a war zone. Eventually at the end of World War 2, when I returned from service as a WAAF Officer, I thought about those children and wondered what had happened to them. For many years I searched without success to trace them, then through the internet I found their father had joined the Petain government and was labelled a collaborateur. I learned he had escaped to Germany in 1944 and then had managed to leave the country and found sanctuary first in the Argentine and finally in Uraguay where he died in 1968. In France, all his possessions were taken from him and his name blackened. But what happened to the children?
Last night Helene, the youngest of the three, telephoned me from Geneva and told me their amazing story. A French writer friend of mine, Genevieve Moulard, had managed to track her down through the Mayor of Contrexeville. Having been contacted by her, Helene immediately phoned me. She talked for an hour and a half in excellent English relating an amazing tale of escape, of anger, of bitterness and of danger. The life story of that family is food for a novel. Perhaps my next venture!!!
www.onewomanswar.co.uk
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