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	morgana
	 the secret garden  | 
	 
	1 of 6 
	Mon 23rd Feb 2015  1:00pm  
	 
	Wyre Farm was also used as a holiday camp for Coventry children after WWII, as well as during the war, as I recall one my sisters going for a holiday there with her class.  Does anyone else recall going there.
Wyre Farm Camp School During the War
Clee Hill 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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	Wearethemods
	 Aberdeenshire  | 
	 
	2 of 6 
	Mon 23rd Feb 2015  3:10pm  
	 
	Wyre Farm (Cleobury Mortimer) was the City of Coventry Boarding School which has been mentioned previously in another thread under the main topics. I went there during the school summer holidays for a week in the early 1960s when the dormitories were open to non-boarders. I went with a party from Broadway Junior School, Earlsdon. 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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	morgana
	 the secret garden Thread starter 
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	3 of 6 
	Mon 23rd Feb 2015  3:57pm  
	 
	Thank you Wearethemods. I must have missed that thread.  Yes it was a boys' boarding school but in the holidays when the boarders went home the schools used it for a holiday for all the kids. At Barkers Butts School anyway. 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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	Wimero
	 Nr Rugby  | 
	 
	4 of 6 
	Fri 27th Mar 2015  4:14pm  
	 
	Actually I wish my mum had sent me there, I bet it was good fun. Always imagined it was some sort of Borstal type place the way my mum said it. 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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	morgana
	 the secret garden Thread starter 
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	5 of 6 
	Fri 27th Mar 2015  7:17pm  
	 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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	Ron55
	 Burnham on sea  | 
	 
	6 of 6 
	Sat 18th Apr 2015  9:47pm  
	 
	I went there for a weeks holiday in 1950. I remember sweets were still on ration because one lad gave his coupons for a dead rabbit and it went mouldy. Was very basic and the canteen smelt of cabbage. Remember going up breakneck hill in the forest. It was the first time I had been away from home on my own, no holidays those days, could not afford. Had to be ten or over to go. We used to sing a little ditty about bread and jam we never see nor no sugar in our tea. Ah those were the days. 
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| Schools and Education - Wyre Farm Camp School | |
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