The Blitz
The Blitz | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of Second World War, Home Front | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
United Kingdom | Germany | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Sir Winston Churchill Sir Hugh Dowding Sir Frederick Pile Owen Tudor Boyd Sir Leslie Gossage |
Adolf Hitler Hermann Göring Hugo Sperrle Albert Kesselring | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Anti-Aircraft Command Balloon Command | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
~43,000 civilians dead, ~51,000 injured[3] | not known, 384 (October – December 1940)[4] |
Template:Fix bunching The Blitz was the sustained bombing of Britain by Nazi Germany between 7 September 1940 and 10 May 1941,[1] during the Second World War. The Blitz hit many towns and cities across the country, but it began with the bombing of London for 76 consecutive nights.[5] By the end of May 1941, over 43,000 civilians, half of them in London, had been killed by bombing and more than a million houses were destroyed or damaged in London alone.[6][7]
London was not the only city to suffer Luftwaffe bombing during the Blitz. Other important military and industrial centres, such as Aberdeen, Barrow-in-Furness, Belfast, Bootle [8], Birkenhead, Wallasey, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Clydebank, Coventry, Exeter, Glasgow, Greenock, Sheffield, Swansea, Liverpool,[9] Kingston upon Hull, Manchester, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Nottingham, Brighton, Eastbourne, Sunderland, and Southampton, suffered heavy air raids and high numbers of casualties. Bootle and Hull were the most badly damaged cities after London with a significant percentage of their buildings being destroyed or made uninhabitable. Birmingham and Coventry were also targeted and badly damaged due to the Spitfire and tank factories based in Birmingham and the many munitions factories in Coventry. Coventry city centre was almost completely destroyed.
Smaller bombing raids were made on Edinburgh, Newcastle, York, Exeter, and Bath. Oxford was spared. Blackpool was hit by only 45 high explosive bombs. One theory put forward is that Hitler was saving Blackpool as a recreation centre for his troops after he had taken England. A more likely suggestion is that Blackpool having three piers sticking into the sea, acted as a marker for aircraft heading for Manchester, Liverpool, Bootle and the Wallasey Pool and also the shipyard at Barrow.[10][11] Hitler's aim was to destroy British civilian and government morale.
Its intended goal of demoralizing the British into surrender unachieved,[12] the Blitz did little to facilitate potential German invasion. By May 1941, the imminent threat of an invasion of Britain had passed and Hitler's attention was focused on Operation Barbarossa in the East. Although the Germans never again managed to bomb Britain on such a large scale, they carried out smaller attacks throughout the war, taking the civilian death toll to 51,509 from bombing. In 1944, the development of pilotless V-1 flying bombs and V-2 rockets briefly enabled Germany to again attack London with weapons launched from the European continent. In total, the V weapons killed 8,938 civilians in London and the south-east.[13]
Prelude
After the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain began in July 1940. From July to September, the Luftwaffe frontally attacked Royal Air Force Fighter Command to gain air superiority as a prelude to invasion. This involved the bombing of fighter airfields to destroy Fighter Command's ability to combat an invasion. Simultaneous attacks on the aircraft industry were carried out to prevent the British replacing their losses, but these were ineffective; changes introduced by Lord Beaverbrook ramped up the efficiency of fighter production markedly. Machine replacements were arriving at a rate three times higher than German intelligence believed. The pressure on pilot replacements was much more intense, and eventually overcame official reluctance to put experienced pilots from Poland, Czechoslovakia, and other occupied nations in front line combat.
In late August 1940, before the date normally associated with the start of the Blitz, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial targets in Birmingham and Liverpool. This was part of an increase in night bombing brought about by the high casualty rates inflicted on German bombers in daylight. The first German plane to be shot down was over Edinburgh after a failed attempt to bomb the Forth Rail Bridge. The docks of Edinburgh and surrounding suburbs were attacked as well, including a whisky factory which caused a fire for several days.
On 21 June 1940 R. V. Jones briefed Churchill on Knickebein - a radio beam guidance system used by the Luftwaffe for bombing through cloud cover. In the resulting Battle of the Beams the British were able to 'bend the beams', influencing the drop point of German raids so that the targets were missed completely.
During a raid on Thames Haven, on 24 August, some German aircraft (one commanded by Rudolf Hallensleben who went on to win the Knights Cross for other actions)[14] strayed over London and dropped bombs in the east and northeast parts of the city, Bethnal Green, Hackney, Islington, Tottenham, and Finchley. It is not known with certainty whether this was a navigational 'bungle' or a direct result of anti-Knickebein measures.
In any event, the incident prompted the British to mount a retaliatory raid on Berlin the next night with bombs falling in Kreuzberg and Wedding, causing 10 deaths. Hitler was said to be furious, and on 5 September, at the urging of the Luftwaffe high command, he issued a directive "for disruptive attacks on the population and air defences of major British cities, including London, by day and night". The Luftwaffe began day and night attacks on British cities, concentrating on London. This relieved the pressure on the RAF's airfields.
Prior to the beginning of the Blitz, dire predictions were made about the number of people who would be killed by a German bombing campaign. A report by the Ministry of Health commissioned in spring 1939, calculated that during the first six months of aerial bombardment there would be 600,000 people killed and 1.2 million injured.[15] This proved to be greatly over-estimated because it was based upon faulty assumptions about the number of German bombers available and the average number of casualties caused by each bomb. However, it led to the mass evacuation of around 650,000 children to the countryside.
First phase
The first intentional air raids on London were mainly aimed at the Port of London, causing severe damage. Late in the afternoon of 7 September, 364 bombers attacked, escorted by 515 fighters. Another 133 bombers attacked that night. Many of the bombs aimed at the docks fell on neighbouring residential areas, killing 436 Londoners and injuring 1,666.
Few anti-aircraft guns had fire-control systems, and the underpowered searchlights were usually ineffective against aircraft at altitudes above 12,000 feet (3,600 m). Even the fortified Cabinet War Rooms, the secret underground bunker hidden under the Treasury to house the government during the war, were vulnerable to a direct hit. Few fighter aircraft were able to operate at night, and ground-based radar was limited.
During the first raid, only 92 guns were available to defend London. The city's defences were rapidly reorganised by General Sir Frederick Pile, the Commander-in-Chief of Anti-Aircraft Command, and by 11 September twice as many guns were available, with orders to fire at will. This produced a much more visually impressive barrage that boosted civilian morale and, although it had little physical effect on the raiders, encouraged bomber crews to drop before they were over their target.
During this first phase of the Blitz, raids took place day and night. Between 100 and 200 bombers attacked London every night but one between mid-September and mid-November. Most bombers were German, with some Italian aircraft flying from Belgium[citation needed]. Birmingham and Bristol were attacked on 15 October, and the heaviest attack of the war so far – by 400 bombers and lasting six hours – hit London. The RAF opposed them with 41 fighters but shot down only one Heinkel bomber. By mid-November, the Germans had dropped more than 13,000 tons of high explosive and more than 1 million incendiary bombs for a combat loss of less than 1% (although some aircraft were lost in accidents inherent to night flying and night landing).
Second phase
From November 1940 to February 1941, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial and port cities. Targets included Coventry, Southampton, Birmingham, Liverpool, Clydebank, Bristol, Swindon, Plymouth, Cardiff, Manchester, Sheffield, Swansea, Portsmouth, and Avonmouth. During this period, 14 attacks were mounted on ports excluding London, nine on industrial targets inland, and eight on London.
Probably the most devastating raid occurred on the evening of 29 December, when German aircraft attacked the City of London itself with incendiaries and high-explosive bombs, causing a firestorm that has been called the Second Great Fire of London. A photograph showing St Paul's Cathedral shrouded in smoke (shown in the information box at the top of this article) became a famous image of the times.
Final attacks
In February 1941, Karl Dönitz persuaded Hitler to attack British seaports in support of the Kriegsmarine's Battle of the Atlantic. Hitler issued a directive on 6 February ordering the Luftwaffe to concentrate its efforts on ports, notably Plymouth, Barrow-in-Furness, Clydebank, Portsmouth, Bristol, Avonmouth, Swansea, Liverpool, Belfast, Hull, Sunderland, and Newcastle. Between 19 February and 12 May, Germany mounted 51 attacks against those targets, with only seven directed against London, Birmingham, Coventry, and Nottingham.
By now the imminent threat of invasion had all but passed as Germany had failed to gain the prerequisite air superiority. The aerial bombing was now principally aimed at the destruction of industrial targets, but also continued with the objective of breaking the morale of the civilian population,[16] and in this respect the raids were widely perceived by the British as an attempt to terrorise the population.[17] British defences were much improved by this time with ground-based radar guiding night fighters to their targets and the Bristol Beaufighter, with airborne radar, proved to be effective against night bombers.
An increasing number of anti-aircraft guns and searchlights were radar-controlled, improving accuracy. From the start of 1941 the Luftwaffe's monthly losses increased (28 in January, 124 in May). Belfast however remained poorly defended, with just seven anti-aircraft guns. When the city was attacked on the night of Easter Tuesday 1941, it suffered the greatest loss of life in a single raid on the United Kingdom outside London, her guns having stayed silent for fear of hitting defending RAF fighters, which had not been scrambled. The impending invasion of the Soviet Union required the movement of German air power to the east, and the Blitz ended in May 1941.
The last major attack on London was on 10 May: 515 bombers destroyed or damaged many important buildings, including the British Museum, the Houses of Parliament, and St. James's Palace. The raid caused more casualties than any other: 1,364 killed and 1,616 seriously injured.[15] Six days later 111 bombers attacked Birmingham; this was the last major air raid on a British city for about a year and a half.[15]
Civilian and political reactions
The civilians of London had an enormous role to play in the protection of their city. Many civilians who were not willing or able to join the military became members of the Home Guard, the Air Raid Precautions Service, the Auxiliary Fire Service, and many other organizations. During the Blitz, Boy Scouts guided fire engines to where they were most needed, and became known as the Blitz Scouts.[18]
During the Blitz, far fewer dedicated public bomb shelters than necessary were available. The government feared that a "shelter mentality" would develop if people were provided with central deep shelters. This was one of the reasons behind the preference for getting people to construct Anderson shelters in their back gardens. The authorities in London, after being put under very considerable pressure from public opinion, did make use of about 80 underground Tube stations to house about 177,000 people. In contrast, the Germans made a much more concerted and organized effort to shelter their population against the Allied strategic bombing campaign later in the war.
Another frequent response to bombing was what became known as "trekking". Many thousands of civilians slept far from their homes and travelled several hours into work and several hours out again every day. Official sources often denied this was happening.
British civil defence preparations for the Blitz were also influenced by the work of Ramon Perera, a Catalan engineer. Perera supervised the building of some 1,400 public shelters in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War. They proved a great success, with no one being killed in the shelters despite frequent heavy air raids on the city. The measures impressed the British structural engineer Cyril Helsby who went to Barcelona in December 1938 on a fact-finding visit sponsored by the Labour Party. When Barcelona fell to the Spanish Nationalists in January 1939, Helsby persuaded British secret services to help Perera reach Britain; he arrived shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War.
However, the British authorities were slow to act on Perera and Helsby's advice that simple but effective public shelters should be built, opting instead for makeshift Anderson shelters for family protection. It is possible that this decision proved costly in injuries and fatalities, as one contemporary confidential report putatively suggests. Historian Paul Preston has controversially alleged that the British government took a utilitarian view and regarded its duty to protect civilians from aerial blitzkrieg as secondary to strategic considerations in a time of war, resulting in much loss of life but saving many more in the long run.[19]
Yet the bombing of London in this period was far more intensive, persistent and devastating than the bombing in Spain. Just before the war, British Ministry of Health studies into the effects of aerial bombardment predicted 600,000 dead in a full scale aerial assault.[15] The mortality rate of the actual assault, severe as it was, emerged as less than 10% of this estimate, which represented a triumph of planning in the face of such terror, though the actual physical, emotional and economic damage remained incalculable.
Great improvements were made to air defences during the Blitz. The air defences and the stoicism of the British people were used for propaganda. American radio journalist Edward R. Murrow was stationed in London at the time of the Blitz, and he made live radio broadcasts to the United States during the bombings. Live broadcasts from a theatre of war had not been heard by radio audiences before, and Murrow's London broadcasts made him a celebrity. His broadcasts were enormously important in reinforcing and focusing the growing sympathy the majority of the American people already felt for Britain's suffering and bravery.[citation needed]
Later attacks
Baedeker Blitz
The Baedeker Blitz was a series of raids conducted in mid-1942 as reprisals for the RAF bombing of the German city of Lübeck. The Baedeker raids, named for the famous tourist guidebooks,[20] targeted historic cities with no military or strategic importance such as Bath (bombed April 25–26), Canterbury (bombed June 1), Exeter, Norwich, and York between February to May 1942. Churches and other public buildings of interest were often the targets of these 'retaliatory raids' (Vergeltungsangriffe) in an attempt to break civilian morale.[citation needed] These and other strategically insignificant historic cities in Britain suffered severe damage, and major landmarks such as the Guildhall in York and the Assembly Rooms in Bath were seriously damaged.[21] There was also considerable loss of life (over 1600 fatalities).
Baby Blitz
In November 1943, Reichsmarschal Hermann Göring ordered the Luftwaffe to resume mass bomber attacks against southern England. During December 1943 and early January 1944, the Luftwaffe gathered some 515 aircraft of widely differing types on French airfields. On 21 January 1944, the Luftwaffe made the first mass attack on London since 1941. 447 bombers were sent out, including Junkers Ju 88s, Ju 188s, Dornier Do 217s, Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornissen, and examples of the then-new Heinkel He 177 Greif, the Luftwaffe's only operational heavy bomber. The bomber crews generally lacked night-flying experience, and the aircraft types had very different performance, which required the use of pathfinder aircraft to mark targets. Only 32 of the 282 bombs dropped fell on London that night.
The raids continued for the next three months, to little effect, for the loss of 329 aircraft. Furthermore, these aircraft were not available to defend against the forthcoming Allied invasion of continental Europe. By 1 July 1944 Sperrle had only 90 bombers and 70 fighters available in western Europe (Luftflotte 3).[22]
V-Weapons offensive
The Robot Blitz[23] from 12 June 1944-27 March 1945 consisted of V-1 (flying bomb) attacks of Operation Eisbär and V-2 rocket attacks of Operation Pinguin (the V-3 cannon was not used for the Blitz]]. Both operations had been expected because of Allied V-1 and V-2 Intelligence, and the Allied Operation Crossbow preemptive counteroffensive had begun with Operation Hydra on 18 August 1943 and continued with the 5 December 1943 start of "Crossbow Operations Against Ski Sites".
- V-1 offensive
- On 12 June 1944, the first V-1 flying bomb attack was carried out on London. A total of 9,251 V-1s were fired at Britain, with the vast majority aimed at London; the 2,515 that reached the city killed 6,184 civilians and injured 17,981. In one instance, on 3 July 1944, 74 American military personnel died in what was later categorized as the single worst loss of life for American servicemen in London when a V-1 bomb fell over Sloane Court East / Turks Row in southern London.[24] Over 4,000 V-1 bombs were destroyed by the Royal Air Force, the Army’s Anti-Aircraft Command, the Royal Navy, and barrage balloons.[13]
- V-2 offensive
- The V-2 was first used against London on 8 September 1944. An estimated 2,754 people in London were killed and 6,523 injured by the 1,115 V-2s that were fired at the United Kingdom. A further 2,917 service personnel were killed as a result of the V weapon campaign.[13] Unlike the V-1s, there could be no warning or defence against these weapons and the danger only passed with the capitulation of Germany's armed forces.
On 17 September 1944, the blackout was replaced by a partial "dim-out".
According to Imperial War Museum historian, Terry Charman, by the end of the Blitz, "...the V weapons [had] caused the deaths of 8,938 British civilians (6,184 by V1s and 2,754 by V2s) while 24,504 more were seriously injured, (17,981 by V1s and 6,523 by V2s)."[25]
Major sites and structures damaged or destroyed
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Stansky 2007, p. 3
- ^ Hooton 1997, p. 42.
- ^ Haigh, Christopher (1990). The Cambridge historical encyclopedia of Great Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press. p. 317. ISBN 978-0521395526.
- ^ Murray 1983, p. 55.
- ^ Some authorities say 57 consecutive nights, and some say 76, depending on how one accounts for 2 November, which was too cloudy for bombing.
- Docklands at War: the Blitz Museum of London
- Stansky, Peter. September 7, 1940: The first day of the London Blitz. That story and does 9/11 change how we view it? Stanford University
- ^ "Air Raid Precautions – Deaths and injuries". Myweb.tiscali.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ Remembering the Blitz Museum of London
- ^ http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/nof/blitz/0500_info.html
- ^ "The Blitz | Spirit of the Blitz". Liverpool museums. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
- ^ "Stan's war memories - Blackpool Today". Blackpoolgazette.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
- ^ Mark Tran (23 February 2009). "Hitler's plans to turn Blackpool into Nazi resort come to light | UK news | guardian.co.uk". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2010-09-10.
- ^ Murray, p 45
- ^ a b c The V Weapons Campaign Against Britain, 1944–1945 Imperial War Museum
- ^ Stallwood, Oliver. Bungling pilot 'triggered blitz' , Metro, 10 October 2006 page 24. citing papers to be auctioned at Ludlow Racecourse on 25 October 2006
- ^ a b c d Price, Alfred. Blitz on Britain 1939–45, Sutton Publishing (2000), ISBN 0-7509-2356-3
- ^ Murray[page needed]
- ^ "Bombing raids of World War Two". Century-of-flight.net. 1940-09-07. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ "An Official History of Scouting". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
- ^ Montse Armengou, Ricard Belis (2007). Ramon Perera, The Man Who Saved Barcelona (television). Catalonia: TV3.
- ^ A.C. Grayling (2006); Among the dead cities; Bloomsbury (2006); ISBN 0-7475-7671-8 . Pages 50–52
- ^ Fact File : Baedeker Raids) BBC: People's War
- ^ Mitcham, p.12
- ^ Ordway, Frederick I, III (1979). The Rocket Team (index). Apogee Books Space Series 36. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell. pp. 174b. ISBN 1894959000.
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- ^ http://london.iwm.org.uk/upload/package/4/.../VWeaponsCampaign.pdf
References
- Hooton, E. (1997). Eagle in Flames: The Fall of the Luftwaffe. Arms & Armour Press. ISBN 9781854093436.
{{cite book}}
: Check|isbn=
value: checksum (help) - Levine, Joshua (5 October 2006). Forgotten Voices of the Blitz and the Battle for Britain. Ebury Press. ISBN 9780091910037.
- Mitcham, Samuel W (2007). Retreat to the Reich: The German Defeat in France, 1944. Stackpole. ISBN 9780811733847.
- Murray, Williamson (1983). Strategy for defeat : the Luftwaffe 1933–1945. Diane. ISBN 9781428993600.
- Price, Alfred (2000). Blitz on Britain 1939–45, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 0-7509-2356-3
- Ramsay, Winston The Blitz — Then & Now, Volumes 1–3, After The Battle Publications, 1987–89
- Stansky, Peter (2007). The First Day of the Blitz. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300125566.
- Titmuss, R. M.(1950) Problems of Social Policy (part of the Official History) Appendix 7: Weight of Bombs dropped on UK 1939–45
- Richards, Denis (1953). The Royal Air Force, 1939-1945, Volume 1: Fight at Odds. London: HMSO.
External links
- The Blitz Original reports and pictures from The Times
- The Blitz: Sorting the Myth from the Reality, BBC History
- Exploring 20th century London – The Blitz Objects and photographs from the collections of the Museum of London, London Transport Museum, Jewish Museum and Museum of Croydon.
- Liverpool Blitz Experience 24 hours in a city under fire in the Blitz.
- Forgotten Voices of the Blitz and the Battle for Britain
- War and peace and the price of cat fish WWII diary of resident in south-west London.
- Oral history interview with Barry Fulford, recalling his childhood during the Blitz from the Veteran's History Project at Central Connecticut State University