Some kids were 'starved' all through winter in post war Yorkshire, where 'starved' means really shivering cold. "Ah'm starved" meant I'm freezing to death, "Ah'm starving" meant I'm hungry.
Some kids did not have adequate clothing back then, nor enough to eat. School dinners, free school milk and daily cod liver oil must have helped a great deal. As for the cold weather - at least the schools I went to had good heating, even though they hadn't much else. We learned to write on slate boards with chalk, and wrote with a pen dipped in ink. I was the ink monitor - had to mix the powder and water and take it round the classrooms.
Even back then, I was born 1945, some kids came to school hungry. while others like me were well fed. But at least the school dinner had meat or fish with spuds and veggies, followed by pudding: creamed rice or sponge pudding and custard usually. Oh, there was 'frogspawn' too - some type of spherical pasta I think.
Does anyone remember some time between 1956 and 1961 when the potato harvest failed and they had to give us bread and butter with our meat and veggies instead? It was great - we couldn't afford real butter at home, but the catering orders to schools specified butter so that's what we got-the real thing. And the dinner ladies baked the bread too - no bought sliced white for us - lovely fresh rolls. We stuffed ourselves!!