Ladies Of Lascaris: Christina Ratcliffe And The Forgotten Heroes Of Malta’s War By Paul McDonald

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Christina Ratcliffe was an English singer and dancer who became an aircraft plotter in Malta in the Second World War. She worked in the underground Royal Air Force operational headquarters beneath Lascaris Bastion in Valletta. This is Christina’s story and that of other British and Maltese girls employed by the RAF. In June 1942 fifty-three female civilian plotters worked at Lascaris, some as young as fourteen. Six, including Christina, were decorated for gallantry. What they did, how they lived and how some of them died is told in part using their own words. Their descriptions of life beneath the most intensive, prolonged bombing the world has ever seen are extraordinary and rare: female perspectives at the heart of military conflict

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Described in the Times of Malta in 1942 as ‘Christina of George Cross Island’, she herself said Malta ‘is carved on my heart’. For years after the Second World War in small corner cafes and bars that are such a feature of Malta’s towns and villages, people talked about a remarkable RAF photo-recce pilot called Warby and his stunning companion Christina, a true heroine, they said. Yet she died alone and unnoticed and was buried in a shared grave. Her story became the core of Philip Glassborow’s hit musical Star of Strait Street, which played in Malta and London. Paperback. Published by Pen and Sword History 2019