WE DIDN’T RUN AWAY We were at war. Thousands volunteered, then went through conscription. Children were evacuated, women joined the forces, worked in the fields and munitions factories. Everything was saved and recycled. We built air raid shelters in our gardens. We didn’t run away to another country. People too old to fight became air raid wardens, police men, home guard, firemen etc. Women drove the ambulances and provided tea and sandwiches. They trained to be nurses and left home for the first time. We dug up our gardens and parks to grow food. We had our food rationed. We didn’t run away. We fought for our country. We learnt how to keep pigs and chickens. Delivered milk to towns. We lived in the blackout for years, went to work in the dark. We were bombed relentlessly week after week. Many worked deep in the mines and in the fields. but we didn’t run away. Our men were slaughtered, our women and children were slaughtered, our ships were sunk, our cities decimated, our aeroplanes shot down, In every town and village, there was someone who died. We did this for 6 years . . .and still we didn’t run away.
@gazza11965 ай бұрын
Fantastic comment . Made me shed a tear.my family fought against both Germans and Japanese. British Army , Royal Navy.im going to copy and paste that comment if you don’t mind. 🇬🇧
@MariTeabag-lf1ly5 ай бұрын
@@gazza1196 That’s fine. I just couldn’t understand why so very many young men fled their countries instead of staying and fighting for them. It must be a cultural thing I suppose. From someone who’s Grandfather was in WW1 and Father in WW2 and me in the Navy for 12 years.
@Rhyfelwr_Cymreig5 ай бұрын
There's no one quite like the Brits, we're built different. Throughout history, through the ages there has been non-stop wars and invasions. The Brits are the only ones that will literally fight until the last man standing is standing no more.
@FairOrganReviews5 ай бұрын
Of course the main reason British people didn't leave was that there was nowhere to go and no means of leaving.
@Nigel_Gardiner5 ай бұрын
@@FairOrganReviewsprecisely....plus the British government made it illegal to not join the army and join in the fight and were willing to arm and train the population, unlike many conflicts today where the government is killing its own people who can flee easily across land.
@ingobordewick64805 ай бұрын
Greets from Germany! My grandfather was forced to fight for a dictatorship he didn't agreed with. He was one of the few that survived the battle of Stalingrad and one of the even fewer who came back from russian imprisonment. I only remember him as a broken man who woke up screaming nearly every night. I have seen pictures of him as a proud young man, before the war. But I can't get these two personalities together as one person. I can't even imagine what he has gone through. He never talked about it, at least not with me.
@azza96525 ай бұрын
Hello, from England. A lot of the old boys got made to do things that people weren't supposed to do. And even though your grandfather fought my ancestors, he did what he had to do to survive. War is awful but brings out the best in people, like the Christmas truce during WW1 where our ancestors played football before going back to killing eachother haha the whole thing is mad. But no hard feelings, England and Germany are like old brothers, we are fruit from the same Germanic tree haha That's why we hate eachother so much 😂.
@ronaldschultenover81375 ай бұрын
traitor
@gmf1212665 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this. I am from Coventry. A city that was devastated by bombing on the 14th November 1940. My mother was a child then and she has just passed away aged 92. Although it grieves me greatly, I appreciate you sharing your experience. It reminds me that war is predominantly purpotrated by those who reject peace, by those who crave power. I send love to you and your family.
@marynorth79885 ай бұрын
Most of us folk in UK realised your military forces ...were just following orders ..just as ours . As your Grandfather ..our relatives suffered the same mental torment on their return !! The lost of sons of parents of German families were just as real for us ...same pain ..same heartache same loss !! Heartbreaking !
@anvilbrunner.20135 ай бұрын
There are dozens of very well written books, films, e books & documentaries regarding Stalingrad. Go feed your imagination. BTW it only appeared to be a dictatorship. But really there was never in the history of mankind, a better example of human community than that which we have witnessed in the time of those great endeavours undertaken by your grandfathers generation as National socialists. He the leader, was the people, the people were him. His will was their will. To disagree with the zeitgeist would be rather churlish. Your grandfather chose long boots & a carbine over the shame of Sachsenhausen. It was the right choice. Please, please remember the heroic man & not the defeated man.
@junecooke13255 ай бұрын
Hi, I was one of those kids living in the centre of London Westminster England. I was born 1935. The night bombing was terrifying. The Brits even in the face of the enemy will fight back, and not show any weakness to our enemy. The women were so amazingly strong, encouraging every child to get on with life and be cheerful. They never stood for moaning and complaining. The only time I saw my mother cry, was when she found out my brother Freddie age 19 was shot dead in Germany on the 23rd of April 1945. That generation were a special breed. And so were the Americans who fought with us.
@paul-antonywhatshisface39545 ай бұрын
Rest in peace freddie x
@Sofasurfa5 ай бұрын
My mum was born 1931 my granddad had been a docker, Surrey Docks before the war, was a tail end Charlie in Lancasters. They were bombed out twice once when the docks got bombed and then when they were taken in by family they got bombed out from the house they were staying in Sutton. I’m heading towards my seventies, and I was raised differently than kids these days, because we knew what our grandparents had gone through, it made us appreciate what we were able to have all the more. Rest in peace Freddy, you will not be forgotten ❤
@GusMac61295 ай бұрын
If it were not for the Russian's, Britain would have been decimated.
@david-spliso19285 ай бұрын
The Blitz was dreadful for Londoners and those innocents in other cities. Spare a thought too for the innocent German civilians bombed and firebombed to oblivion in numerous cities including the awful experience that was Dresden. The poor people on both sides who had to bear the brunt as usual.
@Sofasurfa5 ай бұрын
@@david-spliso1928 That has always been the case through time. And sadly it will never change, because no matter humanity’s various ideas of how to achieve a perfectly equitable society, the one thing that always hold us back from achieving it, is humanity itself. Thus the populace will always be the body that bears the brunt of the decisions made by the elites. There is nothing quite as corruptible as a noble man with good intentions 😔
@leeriches88414 ай бұрын
The respect you show as Americans is truly admirable. As a Brit it’s rare to see such a humble couple not turn to the old ‘you’d be speaking German if it weren’t for us!’ The British resilience you speak of is ‘Keep Calm And Carry On.’ Something we still do to this day.
@anastasia100173 ай бұрын
I think the you’d be speaking German if it weren’t for us applies to the French.
@mikefisher85312 ай бұрын
@@leeriches8841 There are many more of us than it appears. We’re just not the usual loudmouths, so it seems like the average American sentiment is the “you’d be speaking German” routine. But really, the average American understands your sacrifices.
@Joe-ez3gt17 күн бұрын
@@anastasia10017Actually it applies to the Americans!
@hitmancar69505 сағат бұрын
@@mikefisher8531 I completely agree a lot of Americans are very admirable it’s just the loudmouths that are the stupidest and get heard the most making your country look like a absolute joke
@hitmancar69505 сағат бұрын
Forgot to mention I’m British btw
@alananderson57315 ай бұрын
We have a problem in the UK we don't know how to give up,thousand years of history makes you like this.
@MikeGreenwood514 ай бұрын
I think you are riding high on propagandor. When you say 'give-up' what did you mean? Give-up theiving? Or give-up sending troops to follyisome wars to be slaughtered for endevors you do not understand as 'Greed' and the disruptions of others who live and reside in those lands? So you lost so many wars and so many men, women and children endevoring to be an Empire and what have you to show for it. Much langer cemetarys and a smaller Empire. Of course The UK does not have a thousand years of history. It began with Queen Anne. Prior to Queen Anne there was the Union of England and Scotland which unified with King James 1st & 6th. Historically sometimes the people your Prime Ministers opted to try to rule over reply by equally violent measures and place a bomb in your house which helps UK war zellots give-up. Then of course you end up with supposed war veterans talking as one of the few survivors and the sheer absolute Hell their lives have been decades on and for decades after. They too did not know how to give up as the Hell they were part of co-exists like scars along-side them every day. As an Ambassordor for Britian/UK over the last 20 years of wars. One observation I have observed is a policy by the sit at home goverments of 'No-Negociations'. As sadly they to do not seem to have any policy of giving-up untill so many are dead that they withdraw their forces of war. Ironiclly in the Tory war against Bashar Assad of the Arab Nationlist Socialist Prarty which could be seen as a Tory attack based on hate of National socialists the British electorate just voted on the 4th of July for a Nationlist Socialist Goverment (Labour Party). So it's like a double wammy against Theiving Torys and their war mongering zellots. My recommendation is if bullies do not know how to give-up then they should know something about the size of those you intend to victimise and make aggressions against. Pick on the little country and you could find their supports turn-up such as Russia, Iran and China and then when you start seeing overwheming odds you may decide you better give-up. But please see though the smoke of war as britian/UK does know how to give-up. They have given-up so much they now have a smaller Empire. When you are running away from conflicts you started that is giving-up. And when the soldiers return home after fleeing the war zones what have they got? What has the Country, Nation got for the bloody losses. Something worse than nothing. Decades of debt and more scars which they didn't need except that they saw them selves as desiring a bigger Empire. An Empire is of course rulership over others. Such as when The UK/Britsh goverment decided it wanted South Africa. Remember the poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson (Charge of The Light Brigade). As you need to speak for your self or for those in your constituency as many a Milatry Brigadeer may tell you that an intelligent army needs a brake, needs also a reverse gear. A zellot with out a brake is less intelligent than a car s most cars (.99999%) have brakes.
@debbierowley88334 ай бұрын
You call it a problem? I call it a blessing.
@mobsiesixsixsix97854 ай бұрын
Unless it's the government killing us. Then we roll over and say nothing.
@ralphhathaway-coley54604 ай бұрын
@@debbierowley8833 That is an example of British humour. British humour ~ Ironic, self-deprecating, satirical and at times very very dark.
@bonkerslez91Күн бұрын
@@ralphhathaway-coley5460wouldn’t have it any other way proud to be British 🇬🇧
@JohnCraig-y6f5 ай бұрын
I know that some US citizens have no idea of how hard the UK fought during WWII. I once had a US tourist say to me " You should be grateful to us because if it wasn't for us you would all be speaking German" Yeah... Right!
@Jill-mh2wn5 ай бұрын
But what can you say ,in the face of such ignorance?
@larkspur47145 ай бұрын
I hear that all the time online and it really pisses me off , if a tourist said that to me he wouldn't say it a second time ...
@LynxEng5 ай бұрын
@@larkspur4714 lol, why, what would happen?
@anthonyferris89125 ай бұрын
Pearl harbour where the US was taken completely by surprise, two years into a global war..😆
@Shell21645 ай бұрын
@@pauldunne822you’re ridiculously disrespectful.
@adrianboardman1625 ай бұрын
The Battle of Bamber Bridge is a short, but interesting part of history. US military tried to dictate to OUR pubs to have segregated pubs. And in true English fashion, we obliged. By having signs on the doors saying 'Black Troops Only'. That went down like a lead balloon.
@StephMcAlea5 ай бұрын
Bamber Bridge is a fascinating piece of history.
@crackpot1485 ай бұрын
@adrianboardman162 Please don't' hold up the UK during WWII as a paragon of racial tolerance. It's a pity that people in our cities didn't show the same antiracist sentiments towards black and Asian immigrants in the 50s. "True English fashion" my hairy arse. Then in the 50s we weren't in extremis as we were during WWII.
@BenLaws-m9j5 ай бұрын
@@crackpot148I was going to say this. Don’t get me wrong, it makes us feel good to hear that story, but Britain was still extremely racist. We just weren’t as racist as America.
@billlansdell72255 ай бұрын
@@BenLaws-m9j People need to travel more. In the 1950s, we were just as racist as the rest of the world is currently. It's only the West which obsesses over race.
@josiebridle19475 ай бұрын
@@crackpot148 The apparent sign in B&Bs & shops read, "No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs". No mention of Asians. However, that sign was made up for a class project in the 1980s by the Irish Studies Centre of London Metropolitan University. John Draper contended that the photograph had been a fake."The photograph emerged only in the late 1980s, and the university has conceded to me that it is of ‘somewhat uncertain’ provenance. They have been unable to discover who took the picture, where or when. “An old news clipping which I have presented to the university points to the image having been mocked up for an exhibition called “An Irish Experience” mounted at the now-defunct Roger Casement Irish Centre in Islington, London. “This dubious picture has long been cited by politicians, academics, even the Equality and Human Rights Commission, all of whom no doubt believe it is genuine”.
@mannitov26443 ай бұрын
im 19, my grandfather is 101 years old, he was the commander of a Scottish tank brigade until his tank was blown up, by a German tank shell going straight through his knee, he was 19. everyday he gets up and carries on with a smile, we can never forget the sacrifices that his generation made for us
@stiffchocolate75462 ай бұрын
@@mannitov2644 and you have done nothing
@le63605 ай бұрын
What annoys uk and other Europeans, is when Americans say “we won the war for you!”. Our relatives fought and the Americans turned up at the end of the war when pearl harbour happened. And it’s like coming at the end of the party and making it all about you. Yea America helped. But saying they won the war is so untrue and laughable. It makes a mockery of the hundreds of thousands of men and women who fought.
@bobgrant-beer30205 ай бұрын
Nice one my friend. For two years we were fighting alone, we were the only Country in Europe to stand up against Hitlers massive War Machine. It was only a small advantage being a lonely Archipelago nation in the Atlantic. We were an island and the U-boats almost Starved us out. America was a massive help later on. It was touch and go at times. 🇬🇧❤️👍. Take Care.
@lukewoolcock55522 ай бұрын
America is the most Narcissistic country on the face of this planet, they truly believe they are the be all and end all of everything
@peterstubbs59342 ай бұрын
Even then, America didnt declare war on Germany, Germany declared war on America.
@glugalot66Ай бұрын
Research the debt America imposed on us.
@Duty_to_WarnАй бұрын
America use the word ‘war’ a lot but have never experienced it! America remained neutral until the last year of WW1! Britain gave its all, as usual. In the Second World War, again America remained neutral until two years after the war started - again Britain gave its all - are you starting to see a pattern here?
@rawschri5 ай бұрын
One of the Theatres in London was hosting a variety show ( Comedians, Dancers, Clowns, Singers etc ) in 1940. A comedian was halfway through his act, when the audience were sent to the shelters following an air-raid warning ! It suffered a direct hit and was not rebuilt until 1947. The owners thought it would be great publicity to ask the comedian who was performing to host the Grand re-opening .... he walked on-stage to a packed theatre, and when the applause died down, uttered the immortal line, " Now as I was saying, before I was so rudely interrupted " .... He brought the house down !!
@dogstaraycliffe5 ай бұрын
I'm not saying this didn't happen but it was actually William Connor who wrote a regular column at the Daily Mirror for over 30 years between 1935 and 1 February 1967 with a short intermission for the Second World War, his column restarting after the war with the words "As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted, it is a powerful hard thing to please all of the people all of the time." He took his pen name from Cassandra in Greek mythology, a tragic character who is given the gift of prophecy by Apollo but is then cursed so that no one will ever believe he. There is also a similar story about a BBC Television announcer using the same phrase on the resumption of the fledgling service in 1946.
@josephturner75695 ай бұрын
He bought the house down, again!
@Dogsbody61625 ай бұрын
An American name that deserves recognition is Gil Winant. He was a former Governor of New Hampshire and was then appointed by Roosevelt as the US Ambassador in London when Joe Kennedy bailed out because he believed that Britain couldn’t survive the Nazi onslaught. Gil was a real hands-on guy and was out on the streets, night after night, assisting Londoners during The Blitz. When he re-visited London a few years after the war he was recognized and greeted by Londoners. Gil unfortunately ended up committing suicide because of the traumas he had endured. I’m a Brit but I recognize him as a true hero. ‘Citizens of London’ is a very good book if you are interested in this history. It focuses on ‘Americans who stood with Britain in its darkest, finest hour’. It documents how Gil Winant, Ed Murrow and Averell Harriman worked tirelessly with Churchill to bring America into the war.
@hannecatton21795 ай бұрын
Thank you for that . That is something I did not know , though I did know about Joe Kennedy and his attitude to Britain.
@clivenewman48105 ай бұрын
Joe Kennedy hated us 🇬🇧
@Roz-y2d5 ай бұрын
Many wonderful Americans helped us against the Nazi machine in the early days of WW2, ...... except Joe Kennedy and FDR !
@teejai52915 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, I didn't know either. That man was a hero and sad how he died.
@meridianx90205 ай бұрын
Just bought a book about this man because of your post. Unknown subject to me until this, so thank you.
@piers9954 ай бұрын
My mother was a young nurse during the war. During one air raid many people were crushed to death or suffocated when a crowd was rushing down the stairs to get to the safety of the subway. After that she refused to go down there. She told me once that after a shift she finished work in the middle of a bombing raid. Rather than go down into a shelter she decided to cycle home, but she found bombs landing either side of the road she was cycling along and thought she was going to die. She put her head down and cycled like mad homeward and lived to tell me about it. Whenever we visited London, years later in the 70s and 80s, she really did not like going on the tube. Your video has reminded me what a brave woman she was.
@jeanbrown82954 ай бұрын
I was nearly 5,when war was declared,I lived in London,we never took shelter down the tube,my mother would not go down there,there was a church in our street and the sub basement level was fortified,it was divided into sections,and furnished with 3 tier bunks,we used that throughout the war.The bombing did not end when the blitz ended,there were raids right through the war,right into 1945
@leeriches88414 ай бұрын
@@piers995 wow, brave woman indeed. My grandmother was in a concentration camp in what was then Czechoslovakia from age 15-19 years old. I’m ashamed to say that as only a 1st generation Brit, I do not know all that much about the physical impact the war had on this country. My grandfather was a Royal Scot, served in North Africa but taken Prisoner of War (coincidentally put into the male section of my grandmothers concentration camp, where they subsequently met!) He passed away in 1959 so I never met him therefore never grew up with his stories. My grandmother passed away in 2003 and the stories of her experiences still make me nauseous.
@keithcurrie63925 ай бұрын
We British are tolerant and kind ,but if you poke the lion you will find a much different British people, we are resilient and we are really scary when riled,
@dscott13925 ай бұрын
You guys are so respectful....a lot of US keyboard warriors keep saying 'we saved your ass in WW2' of course your brave men fought and died....but if it had not been for the British and Empire fight against NAZI Germany and in particular the Battle of Britain, which made sure we had a staging post for D Day.....things would have been very different
@josiebridle19475 ай бұрын
It was Russia turning against Germany that really helped us win the war, as Germany had to split its forces to fight her. That had more of an impact on the war then America joining us in the fight.
@wirralnomad5 ай бұрын
Not only that but Britain being an island gave all defeated European nations a secondary base of operations where their legitimate Governments could govern all of their armed forces that had managed to escape the continent across the channel, even without Russia, the US and our own Commonwealth forces Britain was never alone, we were the leading contributor of a combined European military machine by default only because the other European nations were residing within Britain at the British tax payers expense "during the war", what may or may not have been paid back to Britain after the war to cover the costs of our financial support for those nations in exile is a different matter completely, but during the occupations of their nations the British people paid for them to be here.
@musicbruv5 ай бұрын
Germany turned against Russia. Until that happened, they were allies.
@johnw65uk5 ай бұрын
Americans didn’t want to get involved as they were too busy selling arms to the Nazis. Companies like Ford were selling engines for German vehicles. They’d have lost their income , it was only the Japanese invading pearl harbour that forced them into the war. When they did finally help us they loaned us weapons and money, something we were in financial debt for years after the war. One reason why many of our houses and buildings look the same, people needed somewhere to live after our cities were decimated.
@grahamtravers45225 ай бұрын
@@josiebridle1947 Actually, Germany turned against Russia. Despite British warnings, Stalin refused to believe that Germany would attack, right up until it happened. The UK and the USA had to split their reinforcements to help supply the Russians with massive amounts of tanks, planes, metal, ammo, food, etc.
@michaelstamper56044 ай бұрын
There's a lovely story I heard about a young RAF pilot who was on leave in London during the Blitz. He was enjoying a quiet drink with friends when a bomb dropped nearby and blew the doors and windows out. When everyone picked themselves up again, his glass shattered as soon as he touched it. The barman, very calmly and quietly, just said "I do apologise about the glass, Sir. Have one on the house." That's us British. No smart mouthed foreign dictator is going to get any kind of grip on us. Then or now.
@billyhndrsn45423 ай бұрын
@@michaelstamper5604 leftist know this, the enemy will come from within, to weaken the spirit, to tell you all is lost, we must conform. Utter rubbish then, as it is now.
@regaustin9532 ай бұрын
If only that was true now..2024
@sarahbob84014 ай бұрын
We British are grateful to anyone who fought during the war we have our freedom because of their bravery.
@Lifes.lemonade5 ай бұрын
My grandma a16 year old girl worked in a bomb factory in Birmingham, one evening she fell asleep at the cinema and missed work, she found out the next day a raid had dropped bombs and the shelter the factory workers were in was a direct hit and completely entombed all the workers.. there’s a plaque on the site where they just buried it over as survivors would be zero.. is now a massive memorial. If my grandma hadn’t fallen asleep i wouldn’t exist. X She still got fined for missing work.
@paulahornblow56505 ай бұрын
My Grandma worked in the munitions factory in the North East
@eveeggleston76115 ай бұрын
Wow thats amazing 😮
@wendyryder27084 ай бұрын
@@Lifes.lemonade Hi! Well that’s not fair that she got fined!
@Lifes.lemonade4 ай бұрын
@@wendyryder2708 I know crazy.. ok you didn’t die so here’s a hefty fine. 🤔🤨😒..
@Lifes.lemonade4 ай бұрын
@@paulahornblow5650 that’s so sad and cool at the same time. They worked their arses off and got treated like crap even when they were so young.
@lucyhardy-styles-shield27285 ай бұрын
I'm English and I never knew The Tower of London and the Imperial War Museum were hit during the Blitz. Buckingham Palace is well known in the UK for being hit, the Royal Family were still in residence there at the time as well. The Queen Mother, the late Queen's mum, said after part of the palace was destroyed "now I can look the East End in the eye and say I understand them". She also was advised to evacuate to Canada with the Princesses and fanously said "the girls will not leave without their mother, I will not leave the King and the King will not abandon his people" Hitler also called the Queen Mum the most Dangerous Woman in Europe as well 😂 he was terrified of her. Elizabeth Bowes-Lyons was a tough lady and lived to the great age of 102
@Trebor744 ай бұрын
The imperial war museum used to be bedlam mental hospital.
@libbybethuk3 ай бұрын
Really trebor i didn't know that. Thank you for sharing that fact
@barrysteven59645 ай бұрын
I heard an American living in the UK say once that she felt that from the NHS to mini-roundabouts there was more of communal feeling here and more of a sense we need to co-operate, work together and look out for each other. My parents' generation always put it down to the blitz spirit. Not only London was bombed by the way. I don't know about that. Maybe the "British communal spirit" came first and resulted in the blitz spirit. Chicken or egg. But Americans do well to tread carefully when talking about the war. We are, as a nation, deeply grateful for the sacrifices of young American lives as the D-Day landings commemorations reminded us. However, when you tell us how grateful we should be, we feel forced to remind you that we had been in the thick of the war for over two years before the USA joined in after Pearl Harbor. America rescued us because it knew if we fell they would be next. It was in their own interest. Which is right, fine and understandable. But be honest about it.
@phoebus0075 ай бұрын
Neither should anyone forget that the Soviet Union was allied with Germany until mid-1941, just a few months before Pearl Harbour.
@KINGKONG-vh5tj5 ай бұрын
NO ONE SAVED US WE THOUGHT TILL THE END THE D DAY ARAMDA HAD 1200 PLUS SHIPS AND AT LEAST 850 OF THEM SHIPS WHERE BRITISH
@peterjackson47635 ай бұрын
Prior to WW2 the Emergency Medical Service was set up to provide free hospital care to people injured by bombs. It became a forerunner of the NHS.
@susieq98015 ай бұрын
@@KINGKONG-vh5tj - The Canadians also punched above their weight for the size of their population on their D-day landing beach and during the liberation of the Netherlands and Italy. Their convoys also supplied the UK at great cost of life and ships.
@gordonsmith88995 ай бұрын
@@susieq9801 Canada was, I believe, the first Commonwealth country to join us and make common cause in WW2. God bless Canada.
@jackie63435 ай бұрын
I must say I'm proud to be British born and bred and my 98yr old mum lived in London and as told us many many stories of the war.not all doom and gloom ,she met my dad and they married in 1945.they moved to Nottingham and went on to have me and my 8siblings and were so happy .dad died age 57.😢but my mum battled on to bring us all up we were a very happy family .mum died last week 😢and I think she was one of the last ones of the war generation,and I truly believe there,l never be such a Strong,Dedicated,loyal,hardworking , respectable,careing courageous,brave generation like that again EVER ❤❤
@jenniferarchdale52064 ай бұрын
I know what it was like, rationing didn’t finish till fifties, God Bless your Mom, they was the strongest wives during the war, I call them the back bone of Britain….They did all the jobs the men did before they left for war, even fighting back home against the enemy… The girls worked on the farms to keep them turning over all food grown in Britain, veggies, wheat corn, looking after cows plus milking,….Not forgetting pigs chickens, rabbits, pheasants , we had fruit, apples, plums , pears blackberrys, raspberries, rhubarb,, gooseberries, this was our fruit…We had a good life through difficult days during bombing… But we survived, ….
@helenchelmicka4 ай бұрын
So sorry for your loss ❤
@colinireson93394 ай бұрын
Very sorry for your loss.
@Trippingthroughadventures4 ай бұрын
God bless your mother she sounded like a strong determine woman, who represents the idea of the British strength and stoicism we have come to learn. You should be proud of her legacy.
@jackie63434 ай бұрын
@@helenchelmicka thankyou❤️
@paulgibson4905 ай бұрын
Much of the western world seems to forget that when the Germans came we didn't give up and fought on with the help of our empire. BRITAIN held out until the USA came into the war after pearl harbour and Germany declaring war on America, Britain footed the bill and we didn't repay all our debts to the USA until the after the year 2000. Now this has been forgotten.
@horyzengaming39355 ай бұрын
Britain was not only defending its country for many years but it was on the offence of attack in Europe. Freeing the french and liberating other countries of German occupation. Russia also played a big part in the war, which history books and western schools like to forget. Without the Russians we would of lost the war.
@G53ij5 ай бұрын
My Mum worked as a nurse during the Blitz, this was before I was born I am 75 now. She refused ever to speak about what she saw and so did my Dad he was a gunner. When I was a child the road I lived in had bomb sites some where the whole house had gone and many where only half were left. Kids played on those bomb sites for years afterwards (including me). We used to go for walks along the embankment by the Thames and Dad used to point out places along the river where you could clearly see that guns had shot chunks out of the walls along the river, bullet marks too from the planes flying over as the walls were I think Granite. The damage is still there so you can look and feel them. To see those planes heading toward you firing those guns must have been very Scary. I had two Uncles in Concentration camps they had some hair raising stories. War was very real for them and us as it was in our lives from an early age. My Grandma used to hide under the kitchen table! I can remember rationing just about, certainly rations for Children such as orange juice came in a tiny bottle like a medicine bottle and we had a teaspoon per day! This is something no one should forget, we all just need peace in this world now.
@numberstation5 ай бұрын
@@horyzengaming3935Of all German losses in WWII, 85% of men and 75% of war materiel were against the Soviet Union. In the siege of a single city, Leningrad, more Soviet people died than the entire war dead of Britain, the USA, France and Canada combined.
@Mulberry20005 ай бұрын
No they did not held out until 1941 they held out till 1945. The US military was massively small in 1941 and it took till 1944 to get the men fully trained and sent over. Yes there was a campaign in Italy and the far east but they were side shows. Churchill wanted to invade Germany via Italy and it would have ended the war a few months early if it had. The main thrust was in northern Europe where the UK had over 1.1 million men and the US army had a 3 million man army. The French had in 1914 more troops on the western front but you never hear them say they won the first world war on their own, the same was in 1940, it is only the Americans who say that. It is true the US bankrolled the UK and USSR but that is becasue they had too esp. with the brits as they refused to pays for American weapons with gold et al - my previous rely. The US army was green and very inexperienced and we saw this Operation Torch, the Italian campaign, and in Northern Europe. Market Garden also showed how green the US army was and so did the Battle of the Bulge. Eisenhower gave away eastern Europe to Stalin because the US did not trust the British and the American elite thought they could trust the Soviets more. Please read up on the relationship between the allies and how it nearly collapsed and how lend lease came about. Ask yourself why? Red about the battle of Britain, The British defeating the Italians in 1940, Taranto raid that sunk the Italian fleet (the Japanese studied that raid and used it lessons on the Americans at Peral harbour), El alamien 1942 , the Battle of Imphal 1944. Also the the British has a massive force of over 8 million fighting in WW2 while the US had 16 million.
@karenblackadder11835 ай бұрын
2006 to be exact. Roosevelt was determined to bankrupt Britain.
@victoriabolam40035 ай бұрын
You might like a documentary called The 13 hours that saved Britain. Its all about one day on 15th September 1940...the battle of Britain x
@babyamy38845 ай бұрын
Yes this is a good one to watch
@brigidsingleton15965 ай бұрын
Narrated by John Nettles, a favourite British actor from long-lasting tv series: 'Bergerac' (Police Detective series set on the Channel Islands' bigger* island (?*) Jersey), and 'Midsomer Murders' where again, he played a British Police 'Inspector Barnaby'...and some of the older interviewees, in the '13 Hours' film were recognisable actors and TV presenters, Nicholas Parsons (R.I.P) and Jack(?) White*, ("chicken for dinner, Davy...!! ...oh...😳😟" ...*he's the older brother to favourite tv actor David Jason, of many roles, eg 'Inspector Frost', 'Open All Hours', 'Only Fools And Horses' 'Dangermouse' (voice of cartoon 'mouse hero') etc...
@sejbomb5 ай бұрын
One of my fav documentaries 😊
@TheSneakyfiend5 ай бұрын
I live in Coventry, Germany tried to level my medieval home town-our Cathedral was burning and the whole city was aflame- they rose to the fight! God bless my Granny and Grandpa for their sacrifices xx
@nicholaskelly19585 ай бұрын
My mother was living in Leicester at the time of the Coventry blitz. She told me that the fires were so significant that you could read a newspaper outside at night!
@hogwashmcturnip89305 ай бұрын
@@nicholaskelly1958 My famiy were in Dudley and they said they could see the glow in the sky and knew when Coventry was burning. As usual the other towns and cities get overlooked, in favour of London. My "aunty" was in Plymouth, her husband was in the Navy. She went into the shelter during an air raid and came out with just a wardrobe key that was in her pocket left to her name. . They went for all the strategic places, the docks, the ports, the manufacturing centres, not just London. To be fair, we did the same back! But strangely our attacks sometimes get called "War Crimes" It was Tit for Tat. As for my "aunty" my grandmother in Essex was having forces men billeted on her, and one was "Uncle Joe" He asked if she would take his wife in, and she did. It must have been nuts in that house, my only Real uncle still at home ( unable to fight due to being deaf!) used to sleep in the bath some nights. Or on the floor. despite that she still found room for my mother to visit and she told me some amazing tales of the people she met, just at my Nan´s house. I think despite the seriousness, they were actually having a great time! there is nothing like constant threat of oblivion to make you live life to the full! "Aunty " Win was soon joined by the wife of a man who had escaped Poland to fight with us. " It didn´t go too well, and my mother seemed to to write her off as "resentful" but I think now we would have a bit more understanding. This couple had just fled their country, lost everything, including friends and family, yet he was fighting on. She may well have had PTSD However deep these things go, there is always a layer deeper. That is the difference between a Refugee and someone still in their own land. At least you are "Home" however bad it gets. To leave everything, and go to a foreign place, with very little understanding of the language, the culture and so on, must have been monumental. Her husband was fighting, she could do nothing. She must have been in turmoil
@niallrussell71845 ай бұрын
it was the UK's most preserved medieval city up to that night - all those timber/beamed buildings burned in a massive firestorm.
@gumnut69225 ай бұрын
Coventry was deliberately targeted due to this, incendiary bombs used to cause the place to burn.
@david-spliso19285 ай бұрын
After Coventry was bombed a new German word was born, 'Coventrieren', meaning utter destruction, especially of a city.
@loui18895 ай бұрын
I almost wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for my amazing courageous great grandmother. She was pregnant and close to labour when her home was bombed, from the blitz (she lived in London), and she was sadly trapped among the rubble, but she was able to get out because she wanted to live but most of all she wanted her baby to see the world. It took her awhile to get out but the baby, my grandad, managed to to be okay. And only days later she gave birth ❤. It’s also great to know I come from two great hero’s, her and my great grand dad who was a part of the army to! Sadly he lost his life in war but his name will never be forgotten!
@Shell21645 ай бұрын
I’m so proud of my ancestors. They were ridiculously brave and still had their sense of humour ❤
@animalian015 ай бұрын
My maternal grandfather was a firefighter in London during the Blitz, and throughout the war, they were as much heroes as any soldier,sailor, or airman
@DavidSmith-fs5qj5 ай бұрын
If it hadn’t have been for Churchill, there wouldn’t have been a blitz.
@Ingens_Scherz5 ай бұрын
So was mine!! (Though paternal, not maternal ;) Though he was only 29 when war broke out, he wasn't A1 (he'd had TB in his youth) and therefore was not eligible for service. But boy, did he serve! "A nightmare" was how he described it to me - without detail - when I was a little boy many years ago. My father described him as a "brave man", again with no details. I guess they just wanted to forget it by the 1970s.
@Billyg2155 ай бұрын
Respect to your Grandfather and the other`s like him who fought the war their way.
@anthonyeaton51535 ай бұрын
The only emergency service not allowed to take shelter while the bombs were dropping. Keep fight the fires was the order
@alundavies10165 ай бұрын
My Grandfather had suffered badly from TB so wasn’t fit to fight. He manned the AA guns in London night after night, made him deaf.
@pabro5 ай бұрын
I was deeply moved by your reactions. I admire you both for your clear emotion, sentiment and intelligent analysis. I recall a recent story of a French woman visiting London with her English boyfriend. when she remarked to him that Paris is so much more beautiful than London. He replied "that's because we didn't surrender!"
@Insperato622 ай бұрын
Absolutely. I thought that during the recent Olympics when several events were held in beautiful old buildings e.g. judo. The French seem to have no idea. Admittedly the RAF had to bomb some French cities, but the Resistance usually "gave permission". The French also don't seem to know that the British took 123,000 French troops to the safety of the UK from Dunkirk etc. leaving 60,000 of our own men behind. The French government demanded their return. Upon their return (only 7,000 out of 123,000 stayed in the UK to form the Free French Army). The French were appallingly led at the time, but doubtless they will continue to blame us.
@harrybrownrigg90575 ай бұрын
The saddest thing right now is that the people of Ukraine are going through a similar nightmare - I have friends there being bombed nightly too. Watching your video brings it home that evil is repeating itself, and again must be stopped.
@madelineantill14173 ай бұрын
As a Londoner, whose grandfather was an air raid warden during the Blitz and whose grandmother walked to work in the mornings over piles of rubble, I also feel for those in Ukraine and Gaza whose homes are being flattened and families killed.
@Jiggypig085 ай бұрын
My mum worked in London as a maid in a large house (I am now 75). When the air raid sirens sounded to let Londoners know that an attack was imminent, one of the places used to take shelter was the London Underground. Thousands spent days and nights sleeping in the underground, in the freezing cold, and on the hard concrete platforms, night after night after night. Although she told me about it when I was older, I couldn’t imagine the trauma, the cold and the fear, that ordinary Londoners had to live through. My father, a Scotsman, had joined up and was a soldier in the Scots Guards. He was captured in Belgium where the Nazis were advancing further through Europe (and towards the United Kingdom) and became a prisoner of war. When he was eventually returned home because of illness, , he was a changed man, his health had suffered terribly, yet he went back to work to support his family although he was never same again. This was all before I was born.
@HanChap25 ай бұрын
My auntie was born in the underground during the blitz/blackouts. My ex husband was in the RAF and we always lived on the RAF camps in service family accommodation. He retired a few years ago. On the last RAF station we lived, they tested the air raid sirens every Tuesday. I have recordings of them. Years and years of hearing those sirens being tested weekly and it never failed to stop me in my tracks and feel emotional. I'm in my late 40's so I'm not old enough to remember the war, but I'm old enough to have grown up listening to stories of the war from those who lived it and weren't so old themselves. So that air raid siren was always so emotional/humbling to me. I just couldn't imagine how intense the fear of hearing that sound would be, knowing you might die every time you heard it. And going to an air raid shelter, feeling and hearing the explosions and then coming out to sheer devastation once the attack was over for that day. Only to go through it again and again and again. It's heartbreaking
@maryandrews40974 ай бұрын
My recollection of London tube stations during WW2 is of metal mesh pull-down bunks lining the walls of station platforms. My other significant memory is of young servicemen clattering down escalators, in their metal tipped boots, with kitbags hoisted on their shoulders shouting across to parallel escalators to their brothers in arms. It was a cheerful noise.
@elainewalton14945 ай бұрын
My great-grandmother was a midwife in London during the war... she spent many nights, inbetween delivering babies, helping to dig out dead bodies from under all the rubble ... my nan her daughter told me that her mother was a tiny 4ft 10" woman who worked alongside the men moving large amounts of collapsed buildings to make sure the dead were recovered and treated with respect... I have so much respect for my great-grandmother and others like her... they never gave up!
@helenc16935 ай бұрын
What an amazing lady, I'd loved to have had a cuppa with her and listen to her stories.
@HanChap25 ай бұрын
I nursed a wonderful lady who was a nurse in the navy during wwII and she would often get her medals out and just look at them. I would sit with her and listen to her stories of the war during my breaks. Her hospital was bombed and she broke her leg when part of it collapsed on her. Like your great grandmother, she was a tiny little lady and she dug herself out of the rubble and proceeded to drag as many patients out to safety as she could. She did all this with a broken leg. She said adrenaline kicked in and she didn't feel a thing because all she could think about was saving her patients who were still alive and then finding her patients who didn't survive. It wasn't until she stopped that she finally felt the pain and realised bone was sticking out of her skin.
@dscott13925 ай бұрын
You are right.... British stoicism was exemplified by the WW2 mantra.....'Keep calm and carry on'......and they did
@Trippingthroughadventures5 ай бұрын
It truly is, extremely evident and I feel it lives in the British people today
@dscott13925 ай бұрын
Thank you guys....US & UK best friends for a reason@Trippingthroughadventures
@muppeteer5 ай бұрын
As Churchill called it KBO...keep buggering on
@azza96525 ай бұрын
"When you are going through hell, keep going" Sir Winston
@billythedog-3095 ай бұрын
That poster was never used in the war - it was held back for use if the invasion took place.
@immoralreplicant13324 ай бұрын
My mother was in Coventry the night the Luftwaffe flattened it. She remembers watching what she,at the time, called " the fireworks " through a gap between the top of the door & the roof of the back garden shelter. She cried because her parents wouldn't let her go outside to see them properly (!) She was 3 years old. Walking around town a couple of days later, everything she remembered was just...gone. She asked my grandma what happened & she said " this is what the fireworks did " When I was a kid I used to wonder why when we went to firework displays, it was always only my Dad who took us. She would never come. I was in my twenties before she told me. She would even turn off the TV if it showed anything with fireworks going off. Weirdly though, she never had a problem with films or TV that showed actual explosions, real or fictional. She was quite happy to sit through war films & the like. It was just fireworks. Somehow that connection in her head has never left her. She's 87 now & still puts loud music on to drown out fireworks in November or on new year's eve.
@AnnMcKinlay-zp2ef5 ай бұрын
I think that events like the Blitz are the reasons why British people are the way they are! We learnt to see the best in every situation, we learnt to look for humour where we could. More generally, we learnt to survive, to accept what we had and, as they said in the video, to pick ourselves up and carry on.❤
@Jill-mh2wn5 ай бұрын
`There`s always another day` and `Things could be worse`
@paulwild36765 ай бұрын
That stoicism was accentuated by the Blitz but it was there prior to that. The Romans were given a bloody nose by the Britons who were their most ruthless adversaries. They came close to being beaten by Boudicca which was unheard of, as they reigned supreme at that time.
@Jill-mh2wn5 ай бұрын
@@paulwild3676 And the European giant Napoleon.
@55tranquility5 ай бұрын
Greetings! My grandad lived in Wanstead London where there was a POW camp, with Italian and then German POWs. Towards the end of the war and afterwards he said the camp was not as you would imagine - with only a few British soldiers, in the main the POWs managed themselves. There was a very low fence and after the war ended the fence was removed. The POWs would work for local firms and go to church and also played in local football teams. My Grandad employed a few German lads in his engineering firm and said they were best workers he ever had. He said they were just young lads who had no choice and had to fight it was not their decision to start the war. They would sometimes come to my grandads house for Sunday lunch, he has photos of him and my grandma sitting with them in his back garden drinking beer! Many opted to stay after the war and some married local girls. Some of the Italians stayed and opened italian restaurants and ice cream parlours - which is why we have Italian restaurants now.
@AnnMcKinlay-zp2ef5 ай бұрын
@@55tranquility I was born in 1948 and my mother was living with my Dad’s aunt in the middle of nowhere in Suffolk. They didn’t even have running water. But their lives were made bearable by a couple of German men who had stayed on in England, when the war finished, and they, and a few others, worked on local farms. When they walked past the cottage, every day, they would drop off a few food items for the aunt, my mum and my sister. One of them was called Karol and I was given the middle name Carole in memory of him 😄
@outlawcatcher15 ай бұрын
My mother was a ‘blitz’ baby, so she was evacuated to the countryside, to here in Wales. Her father was an air raid warden. Her home was actually bombed, so she stayed here. The Germans then bombed Swansea, and Cardiff. She then married my father later on in life. My entire family on my father’s side fought in ww2. Two uncles’s died, another was sunk three times, and my father served in the navy throughout the war. He was on the Atlantic, Russian, and Mediterranean convoys. We are incredibly proud of this generation, as we are with the connection forged with the US during this period.
@Myra-s6t3 күн бұрын
One of my patients lived through the blitz-one day he found a can -unopened- which he didn’t know what it was. He took it home to his mom and she recognized it as a can of peaches. I don’t think he ever had a taste of them as she took it and traded it. The actor Robert Shaw know for captain Quiege of jaws, says he, his siblings and other children were sent to the Orkney islands….
@MarkmanOTW5 ай бұрын
You can appreciate how we were brought up by parents and grandparents who lived through WWII. Therefore, we tend to have a 'Keep Calm and Carry On' attitude to life. This has been necessary as we lived through terrorism threats/acts in the 1970s and 80s, and even in more recent times following the fallout of post 9/11 - e.g. July 2005 bomb attacks in London and others. You see that resolve and determination come through when a disaster or adversity strikes.
@David-sk9vv5 ай бұрын
Not threats of terrorism when they actually made good on their threats. A threat is when something is threatened and not followed through, the IRA acted through multiple bombings and then admitted to being responsible!
@MarkmanOTW5 ай бұрын
@@David-sk9vv Fair point! Corrected. 👍
@David-sk9vv5 ай бұрын
@@MarkmanOTW Nah. I understood your point and you made an excellent one for sure. It is me being overly picky about wording is all. I do apologise if I was sounding awkward and such. Take care mate and have a great day 👍
@MarkmanOTW5 ай бұрын
@@David-sk9vv Cheers! Enjoy the longest day and the weekend 👍
@Andy-Capp5 ай бұрын
My Mum would have been almost 10 years old at the start of the blitz. She lived in an area called Redriff which was amongst Surrey Docks. That first photo of the bomber it was right under that plane. One night on a particularly bad night of bombing they decided to evacuate kids to local schools. My Mum was due to go to a school called Keetons Road School. Many of her friends went there, but my Mum was taken to another school because Keetons Road was full. Keetons Road school took a direct hit killing many among them were my Mums friends. There’s a movie called The Battle of Britain. You might be interested in watching. It gives a reasonable account of what the Blitz must have been like. It stars Laurence Olivier Michael Caine Robert Shaw and many more. I recommend watching it.
@Beejay9505 ай бұрын
My father's side of the family comes from there. Most of the males were deal porters in Surry Docks, although my dad joined the army and was evacuated from Dunkirk.
@speak40035 ай бұрын
My Grandma worked in a shop called Marks and Spencer in Sheffield in her late 20's. Sheffield in Yorkshire was known as Steel City and made weapons for the war effort so was a target. She volunteered to sit on top of the building she worked in to spot planes/ bombing raids and radio to send off air raid sirens to alert the public to go into shelters. My Mum, a baby, was put in a cupboard drawer to protect her. Amazing stuff. My Grandma used to laugh about it and if anything bad happened she'd say ' praise the Lord and pass the ammunition.' a little throw back to that time. Sheffield was significantly damaged.
@Duncan234 ай бұрын
Real Yorkshire grit, your grandma was/is a bad ass!
@ralphhathaway-coley54604 ай бұрын
@@Duncan23 To be fair that was repeated all over the UK.
@doyoulikebeetroot3 ай бұрын
@@speak4003 fellow sheffielder here and I know my history of how damaged the city was I live close to streets that were hit and the replacement filler houses on the terrace streets rebult are still clear to distinguish
@randolph7954 ай бұрын
Great thoughtful reaction. I think as Brits we do now take for granted what previous generations went through. I’m 59 and see it in my parents’ stoic attitude and take it for granted but they were a tough generation.
@Bryt255 ай бұрын
It's also worth a moment to consider all the American, Canadian and other guys who came over but died helping us out. So much gratitude and sympathy for their families. I was lucky to grow up in a much more widespread, humane, considerate culture after the war. I hope we don't lose it altogether.
@hannannah1uk5 ай бұрын
Çanada was part of the Empire. The USA was not.
@belindawilson13503 ай бұрын
My Dad told me of a Canadian airpilot that lodged at their house.During WW2 ,when he was a little lad.One of two actually,however he was very fond of this particular young man. He remembered the day he just never came home. He was so heartbroken that he would never see his friend again.😢
@Joe-ez3gt17 күн бұрын
@@hannannah1ukCanada was independent by then and joined in because it wanted to help its ally not because it had to! Same with Australia and New Zealand!
@casp115 ай бұрын
brilliant reaction guys 👍 I'm from Birmingham UK that also took loads of heavy raids because of its industry and been the second biggest city. much respect guys 🇬🇧🇺🇲
@leohickey49535 ай бұрын
Yes, although this video concentrates on London, it's well worth adding that all large cities were targeted the same way. My family in Liverpool were made homeless three times by aerial bombing.
@ams18975 ай бұрын
The story of the blitz always concentrates on London. It wasn’t even the worst affected city.
@paulwild36765 ай бұрын
@@ams1897Swansea per capita had the worst raids. Liverpool the longest continual raid, the May Blitz of 1941. Hull was wiped off the map, as was Plymouth. They always concentrate on a load of Cockneys sitting in Underground stations. The rest of the country was left undefended. That is why Coventry was destroyed. In Plymouth people had to go to Dartmoor every night and sleep in tunnels.Sheffield had horrendous raids as did Bristol. Then they started bombing our beautiful cities, like Norwich, York, Canterbury. Bath had a terrible raid which killed 600 people in one night. Manchester suffered the Flying bomb raids in 1944. This concentration on London as ever pisses the rest of the country off.
@gazza11965 ай бұрын
@@paulwild3676I understand your point but London is the centre of government whether we like it or not.im from Birmingham and we got it pretty bad
@Richcanvas5 ай бұрын
Video doesn't mention Birmingham, which after London and Liverpool was the most heavily bombed city. Half of the total number of Spifires manufactured were built in Birmingham. Hence why the concentrated bombing raids took place to try and cripple the production. The city also manufactured weapons and ammunition.
@bordersw12395 ай бұрын
During the Blitz my dad volunteered to become a fire watcher . Every night he sat on the roof next to the Albert Hall in London, armed with a tin hat and a telephone, his just was to watch where the bombs were falling and inform the fire brigade , as well as put out incendiary bombs that might land on his roof. He was 16- 17 years old. One bomb landed on his parent’s home, demolishing it, together with their business premises, luckily his family survived, although he didn’t find his sisters until the mid 1980’s. The day he turned 18 he joined RAF Bomber Command.
@markborder9065 ай бұрын
My father did the same, but on a gas storage tower (gasometer), done, as I’m sure your dad did, on top of an 80 hour working week.
@robpaton17074 ай бұрын
My dad was evacuated out of Glasgow during the bombing of the UK to the countryside. His earliest memories were watching spitfires trying to shoot down the bombers heading for the shipyards. Most UK families have stories from the war. My great uncle landed on D day and was killed on 12th June.
@osgar3335 ай бұрын
Thank you for your positive and sensitive comments on us Brits. It makes a refreshing change as schools and colleges over here seem hell bent on educating the young on how bad we are and have been.
@rustysmith35655 ай бұрын
@osgar333 : Well said mate, you speak the truth.
@MariTeabag-lf1ly5 ай бұрын
Yes, I’m heartily tired of the UK bashing too.
@adrianperkins68925 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your respect and admiration for us Brits who stood alone until Pearl Harbor. My parents lived through the bombing as kids, of their city of Bath. My great grandmother was killed, as was my Dad's uncle who was a policeman and was ushering people into a shelter when a bomb killed him. A bomb dropped near where my mother and her family lived . They were hiding under the stairs. all the roof slates blew off and all windows blown out but the house structure remained ok. The gas and electric were cut but my Gran had an old fashioned range and cooked for the whole street , all they needed to do was provide their rationed food to cook. My Mother once said to me "I pray to God you will never experience the fear we did"
@PatrickKelly-lz3pv5 ай бұрын
Britain was never alone, on the declaration of war all the commonwealth countries sent their young men to defend Britain thousands died doing exactly that.
@peterdollins36105 ай бұрын
did not stand alone friend. Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Greece, Norway, Poland et el with resistance throughout Europe helped us survive and they fought alongside us as well as transporting food and war materials to us.
@PatrickKelly-lz3pv5 ай бұрын
Plus the USA used its enormous manufacturing power to build Liberty ships and sold them to Britain with out cost until after the war, with out those ships Britain would have been starved into submission.
@JennieShaw-b2i5 ай бұрын
We didn't stand alone there were lots of other nationalities helping too.
@vincekerrigan83005 ай бұрын
@@PatrickKelly-lz3pvAt the time of the Blitz Britain DID stand alone. There were some individuals who turned up to help, but too few to change the narrative.
@knottyal24285 ай бұрын
My Mum & Dad lived in Stoke-on-trent until 1957. Mum told me that the night sky was lit up by the fires of Coventry burning in November 1940. That's 30 miles away! Later in my childhood we lived 25 miles from London, and on a Junior School visit there were still bomb sites visible on Fleet Street and around St Paul's Cathedral. In fact the Cathedral was still undergoing repairs at that time, about 1958.
@clarestubbs93035 ай бұрын
My Dad lived in Burton on Trent and he could see the flames from Coventry as well. My mum lived in Derby and told me that they built a false town out in the fields to fool the Luftwaffe into thinking that they had hit Derby. (It worked!) Derby, like Coventry, was a prime target because of Rolls Royce who were making the engines for the British bombers. Rolls Royce did get bombed (the Luftwaffe followed the trains apparently) but it was only a minor strike, luckily.
@ennamichaels51445 ай бұрын
My grandmother said the same - she could see the bombing of Coventry from a small town in Warwickshire. She looked after a couple of evacuees - from Liverpool I think - they kept in touch after the war - even when they went to Australia. We met one of them in the 1970’s. We were still very young so had no idea who he was and my mother wasn’t born until after the war. However they treated each other like family.
@stevenclarke56065 ай бұрын
The Coventry raid took place on November 14th , Coventry was absolutely Devastated
@gillianrimmer77335 ай бұрын
I was born in Leeds, 5 years after the end of the war, but we used to play on the old bombsites when I was a kid. They weren't all cleared until the late 60s as part of the slum clearances.
@ChronicExe4 ай бұрын
My gran was in Birmingham during the blitz. She worked at an underground hospital as a nurse. One night raid, in the morning my gran couldn't find how to get to work as everything was destroyed, couldn't find any landmarks so she walked around and eventually got to work 7 hours later. By the time she arrived, it was time to go home again. She stayed through the night as it would of taken to long to get back home in the dark. There was another raid anyway, so no point in going back home. It probably was destroyed.
@DawnSuttonfabfour5 ай бұрын
In the UK if you have a mum, dad or other close relative who lived through that time, you have a living treasure in your midst. My mum was born 1940 so all she knew was that planes brought death. Half her street was wiped out in one night and she has a ruptured eardrum to this day from the blast. Soon there will be none left to tell all this as a lived experience. As far as I'm concerned if mum wants diamonds on the soles of her shoes, dad, give them to her. She, and those of that time, deserve nothing less.
@rolandhawken66285 ай бұрын
You are kidding right? "A treasure in your mind set " My old man was on Lancaster's RCAF Mum was a dispatch rider trying to get into SOE ,her brother was at Dunkirk and Monty , another unc was in the American marine corps they were all psychopathic and the war affected them to the point they were suicidal . My mother committed suicide. my father attempted suicide twice . In short they all survived physically but not mentally, .Of course I now realise how damaged they were and for what ? I will tell you to hand over everything to another race with a religion that hates us
@DawnSuttonfabfour5 ай бұрын
@@rolandhawken6628 No I'm not kidding; plus I am speaking from a British perspective, about those who went through the Blitz. I am sorry your experiences are sadly different.
@anthonyeaton51535 ай бұрын
@@rolandhawken6628 No she is not kidding and please don't scoff. I am in agreement with her. I was born in 1937 and lived thru 25 bombing raids when half of our street was flattened and I lost my mother and a sister.
@vincekerrigan83005 ай бұрын
Dawn Sutton. Still a few of us. I was born in 1931- endured the Blitz, the so-called Baby Blitz (Dec. 43 - June 44), where the family nearly copped it, and then rhe V weapons. The memories of those days will never leave me.
@DawnSuttonfabfour5 ай бұрын
@@vincekerrigan8300 My mum likes to travel but still has to take valium to get on the plane.
@antonycarter395 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video - regards and respect from the UK.
@Trippingthroughadventures5 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching 😁 we want to show full respect, to a place that we adore 🥰 -Tiff
@michaelhawkins73895 ай бұрын
@@Trippingthroughadventures By the way the Blitz wasn't just London but all cross the UK , Manchester, Bristol , York ( although York wasn't too badly damaged) Coventry was really badly bombed it lost most of it's historical buildings. other towns and cities were bomb also
@Padraig19165 ай бұрын
Jerry Springer was born in a tube station in The Blitz! My in laws were teenagers in the East End during the war and bore the brunt of the bombing. They would never talk about it. As a small child in the fifties, I was fascinated by the bomb sites in London. They seemed to be still smouldering. The village that I was raised in had a crater from a stray bomb that we children loved rolling down the sides of. Oh and my mother was fined 10 shillings ( half a pound ) for riding with her bicycle lamp on, in the blackout. As reparation she joined the RAF where she met my father. Excuse my nostalgic rambles!
@ceripalmer95025 ай бұрын
I’m 49 from Wales, my grandfather (born 1901) was one of the fire fighting volunteers who went up to London to help with the devastation. My grandmother was back in Cardiff pregnant with their first child (my uncle). They wrote letters and sent cards, which we still have. Thankfully my grandfather made it back home so my mother was born. The stories are that everyone pitched in somehow, even our late Queen Elizabeth was an engineer servicing the ambulances.
@diane96565 ай бұрын
I'm proud to be British 🇬🇧 My dad was a D-Day veteran and my Mum was at Bletchly Park for a few years ( code breaking territory). My grandparents stayed at home in central London, their stories were scary. Look up the story of Bamber Bridge, the US army tried to impose segregation in our pubs etc, some pubs put a notice on their doors ' only blacks allowed ' 😂 Thank you for your respectful comments. We're still tough 😂
@joancline48445 ай бұрын
My father in law was on the D Day Landings …on Sword Beach ..they were all so brave ..
@diane96565 ай бұрын
@@joancline4844 They were
@juliaforsyth83325 ай бұрын
Same in Wellington, New Zealand. Look up The Battle of Manners Street. US vs locals angered by the treatment of local Maori boys.
@silverbaker21945 ай бұрын
@diane9656 I worked at Bletchley for a few months recently, is your mum on the Roll of Honour? Which hut was she associated with?
@susanrobson58783 ай бұрын
@@diane9656 My uncle worked as a motorcycle courier between the Home Office in London and Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire during WW2.
@raystewart36485 ай бұрын
43,000 People died during the Blitz. My gran lived through the Blitz, born in 1919 (died 1995) and she often told me how she has to get to shelter (The Tube Stations) but as soon as the raids where over, she and many others just came up to the surface and carried on with their lives, like nothing had happened at all. Doubt people of today would be that brave.
@tancreddehauteville7645 ай бұрын
A lot, but when you consider that the single bombing of Hamburg caused as many deaths it all puts into perspective.
@angelau11945 ай бұрын
@@tancreddehauteville764 The ordinary people on both sides were totally innocent in this and every war. It's the crackpot megalomaniac leaders and their enablers who cause wars and so much bloodshed. Modern day Ukraine is the same because of that slimy little git Putin.
@anncosten32225 ай бұрын
@@tancreddehauteville764wars a bitch my friend. "Lest we forget." We must strive to never let it happen again. Alas, with what is happening now, it seems we have not learned a thing. Shame on us.
@GS-dc4dt5 ай бұрын
I saw a snippet a few years ago, it was a bomb damaged shop with part of its building missing with a placard stating, ' open,,, more open than usual' typical Brit humour!
@vincekerrigan83005 ай бұрын
@@tancreddehauteville764Not again for God's sake. So what? It was war!
@jayinwood6475 ай бұрын
I’d like to say a big thanks to you for posting this. I’ve watched loads of KZbin videos by Americans with their views on Britain but I really appreciate that you’ve gone off piste with this one. I’d just like to say that my mum used to tell us about the May blitz on Liverpool and a lot of it was incomprehensible to us. As Americans this must be really hard to understand. But your compassion and sincerity shines through. Thank you 🇬🇧 🇺🇸
@nickmander60884 ай бұрын
Hey guys, the Blitz were a horrific nightmare for London, in particular the East end of London got battered, the hun used the river Thames as a guide in which to make their raid, the underground station were used for refuge away from the nightly raids. But the West Midlands were also a major target, as the factory’s where tanks, the spitfires and hawker hurricanes were made not to mention munitions factories where my aunts worked were all targets, The city of Liverpool had over 500 raids in just one year. That resilience that my forefathers had still remains in the blood of true British born people today. We thank you for your help in the latter years of the war especially D-day, I regret that you guys lost so many brave men in Normandy, their sacrifices will never be forgotten here. God bless you both ❤❤❤ ❤❤
@kburns70kb5 ай бұрын
Brits are often reminded of the bombings even now when unexploded bombs from WW2 are sometimes found as happened recently.
@alexshapley83315 ай бұрын
And even more reminders for Europeans from where we and the US bombed in Europe (especially Germany, but quite a lot in France too) - in Germany, street closures for WWII bomb removal are still commonplace and rarely make the news.
@TimeyWimeyLimey5 ай бұрын
There's a 1980's TV drama called Danger UXB available to watch on YT about the men who had to defuse those unexploded bombs one after the other.
@kburns70kb5 ай бұрын
@@alexshapley8331I thought this video was about the UK? Stay on topic.
@juliaforsyth83325 ай бұрын
@@kburns70kb Why? It sounded like GB was only country that experienced thee things.
@alexshapley83315 ай бұрын
@@juliaforsyth8332 thanks - that's exactly how I read his comment, and I just wanted to put in some context
@simondobbs44805 ай бұрын
I am so grateful for this.As a Britain, we very much admire our cousins in the US. You have always come to help us. You have nailed our survival technique. Humour and sarcasm. That's just how we are.
@duncanfairbairn21955 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for learning about this horrific event. Perhaps now a few Americans can understand why rather than the US being hailed as saviours, many people see how the rest of the world was subjected to nearly two and a half years of blitzkrieg before America bothered to help. These tactics were used all over Europe and North Africa, not just London. The UK alone lost more people than the USA did in WW2, let alone France, Netherlands, Poland, etc. We are very grateful for the help we, and the allied nations, received from the USA, very grateful. But sometimes uninformed comments from Americans can be taken badly. So, thank you for taking the time to try to understand.
@juliaforsyth83325 ай бұрын
Alone? Kiwis, Australians, Canadians volunteered to help right at the start, And many other nations.
@JennieShaw-b2i5 ай бұрын
Even some Americans who came on their own initiative to help, and there were supplies just not the troops till later.
@catherinemccullough2994 ай бұрын
I was born in 1944, in Belfast, Northern Ireland. I remember as a child playing on the blitz sites. Belfast was a shipbuilding and aircraft centre, and therefore a target for the bombs. My father wanted to join the army but was classed as an essential worker, because he worked in Short and Harland aircraft factory. Thirty years later we were plunged into a terrorisr war, more bomb sites, but that’s another story.
@MattDunny5 ай бұрын
At one point during the blitz the air raid siren went off, my mum said she was so tired that she didn’t care if she got killed at least she would have died comfortably. She refused to go to the shelter her aunt was trying to get her the shelter her uncle said he was going to take shelter. Unfortunately the bomb shelter took a direct hit and her uncle was killed instantly, she and her aunt received injuries as a result of the explosion.
@bones19595 ай бұрын
Excellent reaction and thank you for the respect for the amazing people who lived through this terrible period. You are right about the British mentality, do not give up.
@greg98715 ай бұрын
Hi guys 😊 I’m British born and raised in a sea side town called South end on sea, county of Essex in 1953 so I missed the war thank the Lord. My Father was called to do his duty @ the age of 20 and enlisted into the RCAF as the Canadian boys were short of Mechanics. Eventually he became leading Airman. With a ground crew of 12-15 engine mechanics for Hurricanes, spits and the Halifax. He was 2 tall to be a pilot which was a big disappointment to him at the time but becoming an Aircraft mechanic was so very important to keep those boys up in the air! He served in North Africa, Italy, with the with the Canadian boys, also the Polish contingent. He survived the war! thank god. Thank you guys. 🇬🇧🇨🇦🇺🇸
@jexxajess68375 ай бұрын
Great that you've taken the time to look at this. London was bombed incessantly during this period, but don't forget the devastation of Coventry, Bristol and many other towns and costal areas. Not all, but a lot of Americans took the view that they saved us and they alone beat the Germans. They struggle with the idea that without the UK holding out against the Germans there wouldn't have been a possibility of the west continuing to fight. The blitz didn't end in 1941, there were many further raids during the war and in the last year we were attacked with the v weapons causing a lot of death and destruction..
@andrewmstancombe14015 ай бұрын
Next to London, Liverpool was the most bombed city in England. My Grandad was a WW1 veteran. Dad was in the Royal Navy and Uncle was in The Royal Marine. My mum worked at Royal Ordnance making Lee Enfield rifles and Lmg Bren gun. My Grandparents home was bombed thankfully they escaped but not only the house their property was also lost. Later on they were bombed out a second time. My dad had recently married my Mum ( 1942) but was away at sea he didnt see her till 1946. My uncle was on a famous raid called the St Nazaire raid. When he came back, he travelled back home to his dads house he was so knackered he crawled up into bed. When he woke up the next morning, he was still in bed.. but the house was rubble around him. Grandad had been bombed been bombed yet again. So bombed out of three houses lost everything except his marriage licence, which is still slightly burned around the edges and a WW 1 photo of him in uniform. That's the Blitz spirit. Rationing lasted till 1955 What is never mentioned is the Bodies in the blitz some just body parts, some looked like they were simply asleep. In Coventry an air raid shelter with school children in was bombed killing many of them. My mum and dads generation had no sympathy for Germans even after the war. But these days We are expected to apologise to Nazi Germany for bombing them. I dont say it was right, but Nazi Germany got back what it had dished out. So the Blitz is still relevant to many of us Brits living today.
@KevinJohnson-xi6hl5 ай бұрын
Coventry was bombed as well
@martinwilson36175 ай бұрын
Liverpool Mill Road Maternity Hospital was hit by a sea mine and 90 odd people were killed. A school near my grandparents house was hit by a sea mine and I think 176 people using the cellar as an air raid shelter were killed,a lot of them scalded to death by the boilers rupturing in the blast.
@ninamoores5 ай бұрын
I remember being told as a child that in an effort to draw German bombers away from Liverpool ( which of course would have had nightly blackouts) Chinks of light were set up in the largely unpopulated hills of North Wales to the south of the city to fool the Nazis into thinking they were over Liverpool and dropping their bombs without causing death and destruction…believe it worked quite well except for the poor sheep that would have been grazing up there.
@joannebooth6405 ай бұрын
My mum was a child in Bootle, Liverpool. It was the most bombed area by square foot. One side of the street fronted the docks and behind it the railway lines Hitler was trying to stop supplies coming in from America. Houses in her street were bombed. One story that stuck in my mind was her being evacuated due to an unexploded bomb.Brave men defused the bomb but we're killed when they went to the next job. They were brave men
@mauricestanley57634 ай бұрын
I think you fin that Hull was the most bombed place in the country, I only learnt this recently.
@markharris11255 ай бұрын
I was born in 1958 but my parents were quite old (for the time) and were both adults during the war. My dad was in the army and served in North Africa for a while. He never talked about it. He came home from leave one day and he and mum went on a date to the cinema. Halfway through the film, the air raid sirens went off outside and everyone just got up quietly and started filing out, heading for the nearest shelters. Not my dad. He'd never encountered this before. He marched up to the box office and demanded his money back. "Don't get no money back from a bloody air raid," he was told. "Go and get your money back from bloody Hitler." That was a very thoughtful video, thank you.
@Teverell5 ай бұрын
My grandad was in North Africa, too. He gave up a reserved occupation to join the Army, did his bit and came home. When they sent him his medals, he opened the box and showed them to his mum before boxing them back up. Nan and I got them mounted after his death, and now I have them - the guy in the shop couldn't believe that they were still in the box, in the original paper, with the printed table of precedence that described the medal ribbon and what order they should be mounted. Grandad never spoke of his time in the Army or anything that happened during the War. Everyone just did their bit.
@chriswhite14175 ай бұрын
As a Londoner whose family lived through the Blitz, thank you for your empathetic viewing.
@shaunfarrell38344 ай бұрын
My home city of Exeter was gutted in the Baedeker raids, mainly in one night, 4th May 1942. Once described as the jewel of the west it was a largely medieval city still in the centre so burned all too well. My grandfather was in the ARP (Air Raid Precaution)and out in the midst of it, he was 63 at the time. My mother though in the WRNS happened to be home at the time and she and her mother were in a Morrison shelter the whole night. Exeter was in part saved from worse by the Polish night fighter squadron who intercepted and downed some of the third wave of bombers. The steps to Bethnal Green underground I went up and down many times as a student in London in the early 70’s.
@liukin955 ай бұрын
My great-grandparents were killed by a direct hit in their London home in September 1940 when they didn't get to a shelter in time and were forced to go back and shelter inside their home. My grandfather, who was evacuated at the time, was affected by their deaths his entire life even in his old age.
@quinn555 ай бұрын
Check out November 1940, the blitz in Coventry city, west midlands..the most bombed city after London, hardly any buildings survived
@TheSneakyfiend5 ай бұрын
I’m a Cov girl and I’m so glad u made this comment. Our city glowed red with the fires from the raids and we lost so many brave souls.
@shaunbat50975 ай бұрын
@@TheSneakyfiendhave the buildings been replaced
@threethymes5 ай бұрын
@@shaunbat5097 I was raised in Coventry and no, the buildings were not replaced. Coventry lost its medieval centre and built a new modern one. The old cathedral was destroyed and a new cathedral was built next to the broken walls of the old one. The British bombed Dresden and after the war Coventry and Dresden became linked in friendship.
@TheSneakyfiend5 ай бұрын
@@shaunbat5097No they weren’t, I live there now mate-we lost a lot.
@XMan-tu4iu5 ай бұрын
This video makes it look lik the Blitz was just aimed at London. There were other Blitzes in other parts of the UK. I’m Scottish and my town (Clydebank) suffered a two night Blitz on two successive nights in March 1941. Over 1,200 civilians were killed, 1,000 wounded, 8,500 homes destroyed or damaged. Only 8 houses in the town and 35,000 people were made homeless. Clydebank was targeted because of all the ship building which was its main industry. When the internet first started in the 90’s one of the very first things I looked up was my village, Old Kilpatrick which was adjacent to Clydebank. The very first image that came up was a Luftwaffe reconnaissance image showing the huge navy fuel tanks on the edge of the village that would also be targeted during the Blitz.
@marycunningham84665 ай бұрын
Yes all the major uk cities were bombed. I’m from Liverpool and my family were bombed out.
@Missydee-725 ай бұрын
London was bombed from 7 September 1940 - 11 May 1941. It must have felt never ending. The Duke of Windsor advised the Nazis that Britain would capitulate after two weeks of bombing. I doubt Hitler would have reinstated the Duke of Windsor but I wonder what he would have done to his brother and nieces given the opportunity.
@lettucebee84255 ай бұрын
Agreed, 3 of my grandparents survived close calls in Newcastle. My maternal grandma was a follow spot operator and my paternal grandparents both worked at Vickers factory. There were parts of my old Victorian school building that were hit and obviously new. Interestingly, they used to flood one of our main roads to the coast to mimic the river (where most factories were) and it worked. They ended up bombing a cigarette factory and a school. Luckily they were empty but other hits on the surrounding houses were not. War is always more complicated than the movies, fair play to these guys for learning 🙂
@silgen5 ай бұрын
@@lettucebee8425 My maternal grandad tried to join up in Sept 1939 but was turned down because he was a widower with five young children and in an essential occupation (Heavy Crane Operator). Every day he'd work an 8 -12 hour shift at the docks then patrol the streets at night as an ARP warden. One night a bomb fell less than 100 feet from him and he was blown 20 feet into a garden, luckily unhurt. It wasn't until decades later, on his deathbed, that we discovered the lifetime of shame he'd carried because he'd been unable to fight while his mates served, and in some cases died. They were a different breed in those days.
@lettucebee84255 ай бұрын
@@silgen Aye man, my grandad was the same. It made him the hardest worker I've known. The young have always fought or worked for old peoples will. They will again.
@donnaecroyd24734 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching this . Most Americans brag how they saved us . UK was the only country who went to war with Hitler . We stood up for Poland . No one else wanted to . We had no men at all they were all at war , the women ran the country and looked after the fsmily . At least Americsn men could go home to their homes snd families . Many UK soldiers had no families to come home to as they had been killed in air raids . How could the first german bombing be an accident .? Hitler had NO need to be flying over UK or be anywhere near us . We had been at war for a year already. So we may have needed help but we never gave in . 2 years we held our own in Europe .
@lisasimpson45743 ай бұрын
@@donnaecroyd2473 well said ,. 😊
@michapater281826 күн бұрын
Please, explain to me how you stood up for Poland?
@bramba19535 ай бұрын
Aussie here. I recently I stayed at a Airbnb in London with a woman in her 90's she was evacuated to the country & hated it so came back to her family in the west end. She came out in the morning and neighbors houses gone , running to get home when sirens screaming turned corner into her street when bomb blast threw her backwards and knocked her out, this is living history with people still alive who lived it. Another point is that all those people including air raid wardens got up in the morning and went to work in their day jobs, my admiration is boundless. BTW Americans should remember that it was the Russians won the war, the west was a sideshow, very important but history cannot be changed and the East took everything Germany threw at it and then fought back to Berlin and it is terrible that they are now invading another country, do they not remember what it is like to be invaded.
@keithlillis79625 ай бұрын
I think it is an exaggeration that the USSR won the war. True, Russians suffered immensely and pushed the Germans right back to Germany, But the Allies also played a huge part, including of course Australia.
@Stupot20305 ай бұрын
The UK fought Germany in an air and sea war for a very long time before Barbarossa, and afterwards before US involvement. The choice to prosecute that theatre of war was a large part of their ruin.
@ianmatthews30415 ай бұрын
russians without British convoys would have had a much harder time of it! Had it not been for Barbarossa being delayed while Germans had to bail the Italians out in Greece then the advance would have been a lot farther before winter 1941! The fact that Germany was fighting on multiple fronts was their downfall! russia while being supplied by Britain and US were able to regroup! The Germans broke their teeth in the east!
@martinwilson36175 ай бұрын
Russia was an ally till Germany turned on them. At the time of the Normandy Campaign in the west,the British and Canadian troops had as many German Armoured Divisions facing them on a 60 mile front as the Russians faced on a 600 mile from. The Germans pulled a lot of their best troops and equipment back from the East to be used against the western Forces in Normandy.
@jackx43115 ай бұрын
One story stuck in my mind, written by an American reporter who was in London when the V2 rockets were coming down. Because they were travelling at supersonic speed, you didn't hear them coming; there was an explosion, then a few seconds later, a sound like an express train at speed. The reporter was leaving a building, just behind a little old lady, when a V2 landed 100 yards or so up the road. The lady looked, shook her head, and - not realising that anyone was just behind her - said "If that Mr 'Itler keeps this up, 'e's goin' to make hisself downright unpopular." Then she walked away. The reporter said, at that moment, he finally 'got' the English character. Then, he thought, "Even if the Germans had successfully *invaded* Britain, how the hell do you *DEFEAT* people whose minds work that way?"
@ralphhathaway-coley54604 ай бұрын
The plans to carry on fighting the Germans if they invaded is a very dark cold story of British grim determination. The countrywide secret small cells of local men who were to fight from hidden shelters they all knew that at best they had a life expectancy of 2 weeks tops! that is except for the person who knew the details of the area defences, they were to be shot by their mates on deployment, so nobody could give them away, and they would have been!
@ftycggvgybvhhj17215 ай бұрын
Hello from Birmingham, home of the Spitfires! Thanks for being so respectful when learning about our history. It's great to see other cultures learning about our soggy little island and it's past (tragic or otherwise)! I'd also like to say thanks to all the countries who contributed (no matter how much) to the war effort at the time, without all of them the world would be very different today.
@stevenclarke56065 ай бұрын
When the Spitfires and all other British Aircraft came off their production Lines Female pilots known as Ferry Pilots, flew the Aircraft to the various airbase’s around the UK. The reason that Female pilots undertook this is because the male pilots were on active duty.
@ftycggvgybvhhj17215 ай бұрын
@@stevenclarke5606 Wow! I didn't know that! Funny what our history lessons miss out... Thanks for sharing!
@denisrobertmay8754 ай бұрын
@@ftycggvgybvhhj1721 I believe Southampton is more correctly thought of as "The Home of the Spitfire". Supermarine was based there and testing took place at Southampton/Eastleigh Airport. Wartime demand and threat meant manufacturing was dispersed widely around the UK
@ftycggvgybvhhj17214 ай бұрын
@@denisrobertmay875 However, most Spitfires were manufactured here, hence the "Spitfire Island" memorial. Whilst I do know many aircraft were produced all over the UK, the majority of Spitfires were made in Castle Bromwich in Birmingham
@64HomeMade3 ай бұрын
I'm a Brummie through marriage. My mother in law was a teenager during the war, she said they had young women who would test fly the planes over Castle Bromwich and at the end would do a loop the loop.
@daviddouglas66105 ай бұрын
My dad had been away in the RN being a dems gunner on the atlantic convoys he came home to london , his family hailed him has a hero, . .he confesed to me that the most he had been scared in the war (he served 6 years in the war) was when he had leave bacl home and had to shelter during a air raid, .he had to put on a brave face for his family
@missmerrily48304 ай бұрын
Yes, we're still out here. Those of us who either lived through this or lived through the early post war years of rubble and rationing. My childhood was filled with ration books and eating and wearing what we could get, rather than what was on offer, and navigating streets which had enormous gaps and piles of rubble. It wasn't all bad. Forbidden though we were, we played on bombed out sites, ran around in old gas masks and just did what kids usually do.... got on with it.
@StephMcAlea5 ай бұрын
I suppose it shows why the British people are so eager to support the people of Ukraine and Gaza. We've been there. My grandparents fought fascism and helped persecuted and attacked nations. Now it's our turn. I'm 56 so I can't go there but I can donate, spread the news, and pressure my representatives to take action against bullies and tyrants. Hope to see you back on our shores soon, guys x
@twatinahatsmith74285 ай бұрын
Maybe you should look into both of these because there are two sides to each of these cases. For instance, look into the Ukraine nazi's, who are open about it. Look into Nato and their interferences in that area. When the soviet block dissolved, Russia was promised that it wouldn't happen. The USA installed the current puppet government and has constantly interferred in that area. Now Ukraine is being financed by them, mainly. After that, if Ukraine win, the US will own them in all intense and purpose. Their debt will see to that. I'm not saying Russia is blameless. Ukraine has a lot of resources worth trillions. But this is really a war of proxy between the US/west and Russia, with the Ukrainians the pawns in all this. As for gaza. Look into the Hamas coventant 1988 and see what you are supporting. Although there was a renewal a few years back, the old one wasn't scraped though. You might want to look up a clip about a son of Hamas and the terrible things done to Israelis. Or a clip asking Palestians what will happen to the Jews when they get control . They will disappear was the answer, basically genocide. So, for the Israelis to be accused of genocide is a bit rich. How many times do you have to get attacked by people who have genocide in mind before you need to destroy them before they destroy you. Again, I'm not saying Israel is blameless and innocent. But there are always two sides and not as clear cut as the narrative from the media.
@mikemcguinness13045 ай бұрын
You're clueless, we should not be finding Ukraine. They are the most corrupt country in Europe. And full of neo nazis
@forsakingfear36525 ай бұрын
Ukraine yes, Islamists in gaza no. They went into Israel and committed the most disgusting medieval crimes known to man. Yes I feel sorry for the innocent civilians but they support hamas.
@vincekerrigan83005 ай бұрын
Are you saying Israel is a bully and a tyrant? Hamas is the equivalent of the Nazis, only much worse. 60,000 Israelis are displaced from their homes in the north duet to attacks by Hezbolla from Lebanon. What do you ecpect Israel to do?
@carltonhawkes24535 ай бұрын
you dont know what your talking about if you donate to gaza your funding hamas just like the americans did with the IRA and noraid
@danielferguson37845 ай бұрын
My father at 14 years old was woken up one night during a bombing raid on our home town of Scarborough. A large bomb was stuck on the stairs & he had to pass by it to get down, fortunately it didn't explode, though many had, destroying more than 300 houses. The bombers concentrated on the major city of Hull down the coast, but often off loaded any bombs they had left as they left to return to Germany. These bombings consisted of hundreds of planes dropping thousands of bombs almost every night, in cities & towns all across the country. They did this at night because the RAF had beaten them back in the earlier days when they tried bombing during the day. On D Day he was an engineer in a minesweeper listening to the heavy battleship guns firing shells over their heads at the enemy shore. Later his boat continued clearing mines on the French rivers & into the Baltic Sea. While civilians were being bombed at home, soldiers, sailors & airmen were fighting.
@Jill-mh2wn5 ай бұрын
My late husband was a boy at that time in Hull. Typical of a heedless youngster he told me how he would stand in the garden on the air raid shelter ,wearing a tin helmet ,to hear the shrapnel pinging down !
@SeanSenior-f8b5 ай бұрын
I live in scarborough, Yorkshire, and it was also bombed in the first world war,
@Jill-mh2wn5 ай бұрын
@@SeanSenior-f8b Yes ,that attack was famous because the ships got right in near the shore ,without being detected.
@DanNaylor-f8r5 ай бұрын
I was born two years after the end of the war. We lived in Deptford, a borough of south London that had suffered a great deal of bomb damage. We lived in a newly constructed block of flats ( apartments) on of the first to be built after the war. Our play area was the bomb sites which surrounded our building. No health and safety like today. Life was different then, nobody locked their front door and crime was minimal. Because Deptford was on the Thames and close to the London docks it was a main target for the enemy. In 1944 the Germans started sending over rockets. First the V1 and then the V2. Which caused immense devastation. Its great that you are educating yourselves as to how much our our island suffered but stood firm against an evil aggressor, Nazi Germany.
@deborahmillward28893 ай бұрын
Hi guys (from the UK) thank you for your love and respect...right back at you! I think our saying in the UK is...fear us when we are silent. As it's at that time we are thinking and, as you said were are sorting it xx
@soltea79265 ай бұрын
i live just outside of Coventry, the cathedral still to this day sits in the heart of the city bearing all of its damage (made safe for tourism of course) as a reminder of the cities past, its beautiful and haunting at the same time knowing that this building is what the entire city looked like not even 100 years ago
@kathryn-yd7bh4 ай бұрын
Im from Coventry and sometime forget what the city went through until i am reminded with the ruins. Then there are the tudor builings that were took down brick by brick and moved to help preserve the history also. Its a shame we dont learn about local history in school.
@evie-roseclayton1585 ай бұрын
We stood alone for years, surrender was the best option as we had little food, and our civilians and soldiers dying in their thousands, but we proudly stood alone, and suffered, but we didn’t surrender, I’m not proud to be a Briton today, but I’m so proud of one of our greatest generations in our history
@davidspendlove59005 ай бұрын
Not proud to be a Briton ?
@evie-roseclayton1585 ай бұрын
@@davidspendlove5900 No I’m not, the things that made Britain great have long died out, the values we once held don’t exist, I feel for my grandchildren and the world they are inheriting, barring the countryside, Britain’s cities have become like a third world cities, full of knives and people openly injecting heroin as shoppers walk bye, nobody seems to care about there communities anymore
@robinford40375 ай бұрын
The emergency metal stretchers were used during the blitz by Air Raid Protection officers, who would bravely carry those injured during the Blitz to safety. When the war ended there was no longer such a demand for these stretchers . However, there was a need to replace metal garden/park fencing, which had been salvaged during the war and manufactured into weaponry. With a large amount of metal stretchers suddenly free, the London City Council decided to have the stretchers welded together, fixed onto poles, and used to replace this missing fencing.
@caitlinporter64404 ай бұрын
You should do a video on the Hull Blitz, it's known as the forgotten blitz because everyone focuses on London. It was the most damaged British city or town with 95% of housing destroyed and almost 1200 dead and 3000 injured. More than 5000 houses were destroyed along with 3,000,000 sqf of factory space, oil and flour mills, 27 churches, 14 schools/hospitals, 42 pubs. Only 6000 out of 91,000 houses were undamaged. It was also the target of the first daylight raid and the last piloted raid in Britain.
@libbybethuk3 ай бұрын
Yes my nan and grandad moved to hull during the war my mum was born there. My nan worked in munitions my grandad did as well at night he rescued people from demolished houses and put out fires he was very annoyed he wasn't sllowed in the army navy or air force he tried to join all 3 he was coulour blinde and had a bad heart he was very annoyed about the being colour blinde lol he said i can recognise the difference in the uniform i dont need to see the colour i think it was the heart that was the main reason lol. He ran into buildings and dug people out he put fires out that must have been difficult for his heart.
@davidlauder-qi5zv3 ай бұрын
@@libbybethukDon't forget all the other British cities that were also bombed - Coventry, Exeter, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Bristol, Clydebank, Newcastle, Dover, etc., etc. Altogether, 60,000 British civilians were killed in WW2 - 30,000 in London and another 30,000 in the rest of the country.
@davidlauder-qi5zv3 ай бұрын
And what about the other cities around Britain that were also bombed, killing thousands of civilians. It wasn't just London and Hull. Every major city in Britain was bombed - Coventry, Birmingham, Manchester, Exeter, Plymouth, Portsmouth, Southampton, Bristol, Liverpool, Clydebank, Newcastle, etc., etc. During WW2 30,000 Londoners were killed by bombing and a further 30,000 in the rest of Britain. 60,000 in total.
@andypandy90135 ай бұрын
I don't think that many Americans appreciate just how much the UK was on the Front Line during World War II. Just take a look at the figures for civilian war fatalities ON HOME GROUND in the two countries and you will get the picture: USA Hawaii*: 68 (Pearl Harbor Attack) Alaska* (Aleutian Islands Campaign, 1942 - 1943): 18 (2 civilians killed, 16 died in captivity) The 48 Contiguous States: 6 (Balloon Bomb, Oregon) TOTAL: 92 * : Although Hawaii and Alaska were not actual US States during World War II they are incuded for completeness. UNITED KINGDOM 70,000+ (Largely due to German bombing raids, V1 and V2 attacks). About 40,000 of those were in London and the surrounding areas. If you pro-rata that up to take into account the larger population of the USA at that time it would equal nearly 250,000 American civilian deaths due to enemy action over the now 50 States (or over 600,000 now!). Not the 92 who actually did die that way. Now do you understand? 🙂
@juliaforsyth83325 ай бұрын
What about German civilian numbers killed in massive night and day bombing raids?
@martinwebb16815 ай бұрын
@@juliaforsyth8332 ... They got what they voted for.
@andypandy90135 ай бұрын
@@juliaforsyth8332 As Air Marshall Harris said in 1942: "The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everybody else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw and half a hundred other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation. They sowed the wind, and now they are going to reap the whirlwind."
@andypandy90135 ай бұрын
@@martinwebb1681 Yes. They did. Hitler had made it absolutely crystal clear from the 1920s what his territorial ambitions were and what his racial hatred was. And they were happy to go along with it as it suited them. 😠
@andypandy90135 ай бұрын
@@juliaforsyth8332 To quote Air Marshall Harris in 1942: "The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw, and half a hundred other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation. They sowed the wind, and now they are going to reap the whirlwind."
@hiramabiff20175 ай бұрын
I still have my dad's old metal tin box with about 10 pieces of bomb shrapnel he had collected as a boy during the Blitz. Although inanimate objects I am fascinated by them and have recorded the stories my father told me about each piece, and now my grandson's are destined to be as bored as I was when my dad would tell me about them when I was young. They will learn like I learned as I got older to appreciate how close we came to dodging genocide on this Island to one of the globes darkest periods in history.
@Gangstergranny19505 ай бұрын
I’m 75 and when I was little we used to play on a bomb site just a few hundred yards from our house. My mum told me when the bombs were coming down she took my older brothers and sisters who were small at the time and hid under the staircase, as they didn’t have an air shelter, it must’ve been absolutely terrifying
@brendanukveteran23605 ай бұрын
Thankyou for trying to learn about us - I certainly appreciate your widened perception of the UK
@smithjames0585 ай бұрын
The only thing I would say about the video you watched here, he doesn't go into enough detail about the Coventry Raid. Which was actually the most devastating raid outside of London. And most damaging per square mile of the entire Blitz. That raid started at 7pm on the 14th November. And didn't end until 8am the next morning. It was continuous bombing for 13 hours straight. The city of Coventry was a historic city, made up of medieval houses and buildings, timber structures, in tight narrow streets. So the Germans loaded their bombers with incendiary Bombs, rather than explosives. Which would melt into a molten metal onto the roofs of these buildings, setting them alight, and causing a huge firestorm that was so big, the next waves of German bomber pilots taking off from france could see it within 10 minutes of taking off. Coventry also lost its medieval cathedral that night. The ruins of which still stand today innthe centre of the city, as a reminder to the world of the destruction of war. Definitely worth looking into if this aspect of British history interests you.
@MollyJones-gx1fc5 ай бұрын
I was there that night, I was five years old, under the stairs. My mother thought it was the safest place, as she had noticed in bombed buildsings the stair were always there!! She forgot the gas pipes and meters were also there! We were bombed on other nights too. I used to go to bed and say please don't let them come again. My Dad had fought in the first world war, wounded at Gallipoli, so was an Air Raid Warden during the second. Sometimes when we could hear the bombers overhead, Dad would say,"Oh Brums getting it tonight" Meaning Birmingham. Both my brother were called up, but before they went (one in the REME and one in the fleet Air Arm ), the youngest was a van driver and took us one night out of Coventry, we stopped at a house near Corley. Peope outside the City would always give shelter. It was a very noisy night and the next morning we discovers we were next to a gun site!!
@david-spliso19285 ай бұрын
Look up the German word, 'Coventrieren'.
@Missydee-725 ай бұрын
Hull was almost decimated - 95% of their homes were lost. London was bombed almost every night for eight months. Even small seaside towns like the one I was brought up in in Sussex had bombs dropped randomly if there were any left from the raids. My stepmother said that the worst was the unmanned bombs towards the end of the war. The frightening silence when the engine cut out just before it descended. There were a lot of fatalities/injuries caused by the blackout as well.
@charlesfrancis68945 ай бұрын
My family lived through the Blitz. The Battle of Britain was a vital battle had the R.A.F. lost the invasion of Britain would have taken place and if Germany had won the world would be a different place just for one example D-Day would not have taken place .
@EdgyNumber15 ай бұрын
Frighteningly, Eric Melrose Brown (in my opinion, the best pilot that's ever lived) interviewed Goering, and the former Luftwaffe chief had concluded that the Battle of Britain had been a draw. When Brown mention what he had said to his higher-ups, he got no arguments, instead their response was 'weren't we rather lucky.' Had Hiitler not pulled his resources away from Britain to go and have a go at the Soviet Union, its likely we would've seen a slow painful RAF and a ME109 using The Mall as a landing strip opposite a destroyed Buckingham Palace.
@juliaforsyth83325 ай бұрын
And Russia would've changed sides again and made use of the Concentration Camp plans that they were so interested in after the war and thought they were very good. Allies refused to hand them over.
@charlesfrancis68945 ай бұрын
@@EdgyNumber1 Very logical and the difference one man can make to a war the interesting question would have been would the British scientists changed sides including the secrets at Bletchley Park considering how persuasive the Gestapo could be with threats to peoples families ,and would the R.N. not surrender regardless of orders plus another thousand or so other possible scenarios.
@silgen5 ай бұрын
A common held view but wrong. Even if the BoB had been lost the Germans would still have to invade. They had no landing craft, only river barges that would have sank in the slightest swell (and the Channel can get very rough), much of their navy had already been destroyed during the invasion of Norway. And if by some miracle the Germans managed to get an invasion fleet together and have perfect conditions the British would have just thrown their Home Fleet at it (and the Home Fleet alone was bigger than the German Navy) and damn any losses. It would have been a slaughter, a whole German army would have died.
@anthonyeaton51534 ай бұрын
Precisely👍
@OriginalHandprint5 ай бұрын
I come from South London and in the early 1969’s just old enough to remember streets still with bomb craters and shored up buildings - Gran still had the Anderson shelter in the back yard! Mum was evacuated to Wales; Grans house was hit by incendiaries and her chickens were seen running around on fire!
@Teverell5 ай бұрын
...I guess that's one way to get roast chicken. You can walk down streets in my old home town (as in a lot of towns and cities, let's be real) and see where the bombs fell - Victorian and Edwardian terraces with gaps filled by ugly modern housing or flats. I recently moved from Gillingham in Kent and on the way back from the London raids, the Germans would drop any bombs they were still carrying to lighten the load on their way home - not to mention that Chatham Dockyard was a major Royal Navy base at the time and there were other military targets in the area.
@lynwratten98573 ай бұрын
My mum had my older sister two years before the war ended and lived on the top floor of a London house, she didn't have time to get downstairs and make it to a shelter, she just sat under the table with my sister hoping for the best. I was born after the war ended in 1953 but grew up playing on bombsites. Next time you come to visit the UK have a look at the walls of old buildings in London and you will see damage caused by flying shrapnel.
@beverlybradley54855 ай бұрын
My Grandmother worked in an ammunition factory during the war, my Grandfather her husband was first called up as he was in the army he was a Gunner in North Africa, one of the Desert Rats,my Dad was very young when his father went to war, and was 8 years old when he came home, my Grandfather was captured by the Germans put in an Italian prison camp and he escaped, he was captured a second time and then he escaped over the Alps into Switzerland and was in-turned until the end of the war, my Grandmother also took two little boys from Newcastle as evacuees who stayed with them for most of the war, when my Grandfather eventually came home my Dad didn’t recognise him as he was 4 years old when he left to fight.
@Palominohusky5 ай бұрын
My Father volunteered to go to Coventry after it had been bombed, to help with the rescue effort. He was detailed to go to a Maternity hospital which had received a direct hit. When he returned home he sobbed as he told my mother of the horror of removing the dead and mutilated bodies of the Mothers and their Newborn Babies. He had been in a reserved occupation, which was why he volunteered.
@22seanmurphy5 ай бұрын
Hi guy's im 61 now from the UK and yes the blitz was horrifying and I'm lucky i wasn't born, I have to say that without the enormous amount of help that you and other countries combined saved us and we will always be beholden to the USA and still our closest allies and we are proud of that, as we speak Ukraine is getting Blitzed so i can't imagine what that feels like we are so lucky to have our freedom 👋👋🙏🙏
@sallysmith77785 ай бұрын
There is a place outside London called the Chislehurst Caves. Originally being mined out by the Romans for minerals and chalk, there are over 20 miles of tunnels and they became a refuge for thousands of Londoners every night; people would come down from the East End to shelter. There were canteens, a hospital, and other support for everyone. A very interesting place to visit. My daughter remembers them in the 80’s as being a great disco venue!😊
@charlesfrancis68945 ай бұрын
You both have an amazing awareness.
@john_smith14715 ай бұрын
Several deep level shelters were constructed around London, sometimes called secret bunkers, a few can be visited on accompanied tours, the one by Goodge Street tube station became headquarters for General Eisenhower, and is now called the Eisenhower Centre and used for deep storage.
@wordsmith525 ай бұрын
You may not be aware of it, but there were many Americans in and around London during the Blitz. Volunteers in the airforce, civil defence and reporters (look up Ed Murrow) and broadcasters and just a number of ordinary people whose work or business kept them in london.
@native2000wilson-um1ty2 ай бұрын
My mum and dad grew up in east London during the blitz as teenagers not far from the river Thames that the German planes used to follow into London, from the stories he told me it sounded scary times but the people pulled together and carried on there daily business regardless, we have that bulldog spirit and the saying here is ' it's the quiet ones you have to watch out for '