03/26/2026
In December 1938, a 29-year-old London stockbroker had his suitcase packed and his train ticket ready for a skiing holiday in the Alps.
Then the telephone rang.
On the other end was a friend calling from Prague. His voice was urgent.
“Don’t go skiing,” he said. “Come here instead.”
The young man changed his plans that same day.
His name was Nicholas Winton.
What he saw when he arrived in Prague would haunt him for the rest of his life.
Just months earlier, Hi**er had forced the annexation of the Sudetenland. Jewish families were fleeing their homes in panic. Refugee camps had sprung up on the edges of the city — tents sagging under winter snow, parents whispering about rumors of what might come next.
But it was the children who struck Winton the hardest.
Hundreds of them. Some still toddlers, others old enough to sense the fear in the adults around them. Many had not slept properly in weeks. They clung to their parents’ coats or stood quietly, watching a world that was changing too fast.
Winton had not come as part of any official mission. He had no authority, no organization, and no experience in rescue work.
He was simply a man who could see what was happening.
And he asked one question:
What can I do?
He learned that Britain had a narrow window for refugee children. The government allowed minors to enter without their parents — but only if two conditions were met: a British family had to agree to take them in, and a financial guarantee of £50 (a huge sum at the time) had to be deposited for each child.
For the desperate families in those camps, ÂŁ50 was impossible.
Still, the door was not completely closed.
Nicholas Winton decided he would try to push it open wider.
He returned to London and turned his mother’s dining room into an improvised rescue office. Papers covered the table. Photographs of children were spread across the floor. Letters arrived daily from Prague with lists of names and ages.
He began writing to anyone who might help — church groups, civic organizations, wealthy acquaintances, even strangers whose addresses he found in directories.
He explained that Jewish children in Czechoslovakia needed homes. That without help they might not survive what was coming.
Some people ignored the letters.
Others answered.
Slowly, families across Britain began agreeing to take in children they had never met. The ÂŁ50 guarantee was raised piece by piece. Volunteers in Prague worked tirelessly to prepare documents and organize departures.
Each day Winton went to his regular job at the stock exchange.
Each evening he came home and continued the rescue effort.
By March 1939, the first train left Prague carrying children to safety. Each child wore an identification tag around the neck. Some were quiet with confusion. Others cried as the platform slid away. Parents stood watching long after the carriages disappeared, knowing they might never see their sons and daughters again.
Over the following months, eight trains successfully reached Britain. Six hundred sixty-nine children were saved.
A ninth train was scheduled for September 1, 1939 — two hundred fifty more children, their names on the list, their suitcases packed.
That morning, German forces invaded Poland.
Borders slammed shut.
The train never left Prague.
Of those two hundred fifty children waiting to board, only two are known to have survived the war.
Nicholas Winton carried that knowledge quietly for the rest of his life.
He served in the Royal Air Force during the war, later married, raised a family, and worked in finance and social services. For fifty years he rarely spoke about what he had done. The documents, photographs, and lists of children remained in a scrapbook stored in his attic.
Then, in 1988, his wife found the scrapbook.
She contacted the BBC.
Not long afterward, Nicholas Winton found himself sitting in the audience of the television program That’s Life!. He had been invited as a guest but did not know why.
During the broadcast, the host began telling the story of a young British man who had organized trains to rescue children from Nazi-occupied Europe before the war.
Winton listened politely, unaware the story was about him.
Then the host revealed his name.
The audience turned toward the quiet man sitting among them.
The host asked a simple question:
“Is there anyone here tonight who owes their life to Nicholas Winton?”
The woman sitting beside him slowly stood up.
Then another person stood behind him.
Then another.
Within seconds, rows of men and women across the studio were on their feet.
They were now in their fifties and sixties — teachers, doctors, parents, grandparents.
But decades earlier they had been the frightened children wearing identification tags on trains leaving Prague.
Tears filled Winton’s eyes as he looked around the room.
For the first time he could see what those lists of names had become.
Not numbers.
Lives.
Families.
Generations.
The story spread around the world. In 2003 he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. He spent his later years meeting many of the people he had helped rescue — and the children and grandchildren who existed because those trains had run.
When Nicholas Winton died in 2015 at the age of 106, the 669 children he saved had grown into a family of more than 6,000 descendants.
All of them traced back to one moment in 1938.
A phone call.
A changed travel plan.
And a decision by an ordinary young man not to look away when he saw children who needed help.