From refugees fleeing the ravages of war-torn Europe in World War I to modern asylum seekers, Cornwall has welcomed people seeking sanctuary across the generations.
Cornwall's proximity to the French coast made the county a natural destination for those seeking sanctuary over 100 years ago. In this episode we hear how Cornish folk shouldered the burden of the First World War effort by welcoming refugees from Belgium, and later Jewish people escaping persecution.
In the Second World War, hundreds of children made Cornwall their temporary home as young evacuees in World War II. Many of them spent their formative years in villages by the sea before having to return to their home cities which had been ravaged by bombing raids.
And today, local people still welcome those fleeing war and persecution and support them in securing a safe and healthy life for themselves and their families.
5 DCLI - a history of Cornwall's volunteer force
Soldiers of Colour
Mental Health and the Military
History of Bodmin Keep
Gay and in uniform
School for Spies
Cornwall's D-Day
The Berlin Wall
Music, Military and Morale
Bodmin Keep War Stories
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