p51
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,119
- Location
- Well behind the front lines!
I'm on the downhill side of my model railroad layout build, and the layout takes place in 1943. I was given a hobo figure and I decided to just place it on the front porch of a log cabin so it looks like a hillbilly farmer, instead.
But it got me wondering, how common were hobos, homeless and people previously called, "the dregs" back during the WW2 years? Sure, if a man could be drafted, he'd be breaking the law by now going, but what about the crazies, boozers and such that weren't medically acceptable for service? How common were people like that to not contribute at all in the days of rationing? Or was it easier to get along for that reason, in that timeframe?
In all my years of reading about the WW2 era, I can't recall seeing what happened to folks like that during WW2?
But it got me wondering, how common were hobos, homeless and people previously called, "the dregs" back during the WW2 years? Sure, if a man could be drafted, he'd be breaking the law by now going, but what about the crazies, boozers and such that weren't medically acceptable for service? How common were people like that to not contribute at all in the days of rationing? Or was it easier to get along for that reason, in that timeframe?
In all my years of reading about the WW2 era, I can't recall seeing what happened to folks like that during WW2?