Sorry to be slow in responding to your kind message –– and many thanks for the details you added about the Spurn Point AA station. I'm sure you're right, there must have been, over the course of the war, many ATS personnel coming and going. I know that Mum was not in touch with any of her ATS colleagues, and she never ventured any details of her time at Spurn Point ... just that I seem to remember her saying that it was a lengthy posting. Mum spoke more often about her transfer in 1945 to Berlin / Potsdam. During her time there she was taken by bus to Belsen: it was not compulsory for British servicemen and women to make the visit, but the authorities thought it desirable that as many people as possible witnessed the atrocities committed by the Nazis, so that the Shoah would never be forgotten, so that no one in future could deny that such genocide had taken place. I know Mum's experience remained vividly with her.
Thanks again for the details you sent of the work undertaken by the ATS women. Do you think that they get enough recognition for their contribution?
Best wishes