The M&S Canterbury Staff Firefighting Team of 1944 were responsible for dealing with incendiary bombs and putting out fires. As most men were in active service, chief positions were filled by women who took on new roles and responsibilities at almost every level of M&S. The loyalty and determination of the female sales staff played a crucial role in keeping M&S going through the war years.
There was a devastating raid on Bristol on 24th November 1940 – the fires in the city could be seen from 160 miles away. The M&S store was completely destroyed and these melted coins, found in the wreckage, were all that remained of the cash float.
The store manager Mr Fearn recalled that he tried to get to the store on Castle Street by 8.00pm but the whole area had been cordoned off and he believed that the store had been totally demolished. The following morning he tried to reach the store again, he recalled seeing:
'a labyrinth of hose-pipes, tired and dirty policemen and firemen' and 'a crowd of sales girls, some of whom were in tears'.
A temporary store was opened at 64-66 East Street in the Bedminster area of Bristol on 28th March 1941, this store remained open for 25 years until its closure on 19th March 1966.
Apart from this devastation the Bristol store faced other tragedies with the loss of staff; Mrs K. Downs was killed by a bomb blast outside the store on her way to the dentist in August 1942, and the assistant manager Major Ronald Crouch, MC, Royal Artillery was killed in an accident whilst serving at the end of the war.

