Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Why the Major Cities of Britain Were Bombed by the Germans in 1940 - 19
 Why the Major Cities of Britain Were Bombed by the Germans in 1940 - 1941   Immediately after the defeat of France in the June of 1940, Adolf   Hitler gave his generals the orders to  orchestrate the invasion of   Britain. This plan was code-named Operation Sealion and its objective   was to land 160,000 German fighters along a forty mile stretch of   south-east Englands coast. It was only a  fewer weeks before a large   fleet of vessels was ready for  tone-beginning. Among them 2000 barges lay   waiting for the go ahead in German, Belgian and French harbours. As   Hitlers generals were concerned  almost the damage the R.A.F could   inflict upon their armada the invasion was postponed until the British   air force had been annihilated. On 12th August the mass bomber attacks   on radar stations, aircraft factories and fighter airfields began   This attack was followed by daily raids on Britain, this became the   beginning of the Battle of Britain. Although these plans were drawn up      Hitler was never very keen on them, his lack of enthusiasm caused   their abandonment on October the 12th 1940. Instead of invasion Hitler   switched his efforts to pounding Britain into submission with gruesome   sustained nightly bombing campaign. Blitz the German word for   lightening was applied by the British press to the raids carried out   over Britain in 1940 and 1941. This concentrated direct bombing of   industrial targets and civilian centres began on 7th September 1940   with heavy raids on capital of the United Kingdom and other major cities.   Manchester (marked (A)   London   Belfast   Sheffield   Coventry   Portsmouth   Glasgow   Edinburgh   Canterbury   Newcastle   Norwich   Su...  ...r pipe.   Censorship of photographs was very common during the blitz.   Photographs were not always censored because they showed death and   disasters of the worst kind, but  as well as because they portrayed the   misery and angst of civilians, and depicted the widening gap between      the ways of life of the working classes in comparison. However all the   censorship could not  hold in the damage nor repair it and it could not   erase the images of burning and dismembered corpses in the minds of   the people.   Although the people stoically stood shoulder-to-shoulder against the   onslaught, what they suffered was nothing compared to what the Germans   were going to suffer. As Sir Arthur (bomber) Harris said when he had   the  bare-assed generation of long-range heavy bombers at his disposal   They have sown the wind, now they will reap the whirlwind.                  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.