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The raid on St Nazaire has gone down in history as one of the most
daring commando raids of all time. Given the code name of Operation
Chariot, it took place in the early hours of Saturday, 28 March
1942, and was a joint undertaking by the Royal Navy and British
Commando units. The port at St Nazaire, which sits on the Loire
estuary and the Atlantic Ocean, has a dry dock that was capable of
accommodating some of Germany's biggest naval vessels, such as the
_Bismarck_, or the _Tirpitz_. By putting the port out of action,
any repairs or maintenance work that needed to be carried out would
instead have to be undertaken back home at the German port of
Bremerhaven. To do this, the German vessels would either have to
navigate the waters of the English Channel or the North Sea, with
both journeys potentially bringing them to the attention of the
Home Fleet of the Royal Navy. A raiding force of 612 officers and
men were assembled and dispatched from Falmouth to carry out the
raid, sailing on board the obsolete British destroyer HMS
_Campbeltown_, along with 18 Motor Launches. The idea was to ram
the destroyer in to the outer gates of the dry dock at St Nazaire
and put it out of action for as long as possible. The raid was a
success, but came at a price: of those who set out, 169 were killed
whilst a further 215 were captured. Only 3 Motor Launches and 228
men escaped and made the return journey back to the UK. Many brave
men gave it their all during the action at St Nazaire, to such an
extent that 89 of those who took part in the raid were awarded
decorations for bravery, including 5 who were awarded the Victoria
Cross.
Joachim Peiper held the rank of Obersturmbannfuhrer in Nazi
Germany's fanatical Schutzstaffel, more commonly referred to as the
SS. He spent the first two years of the war as an adjutant to the
Reichsfuhrer of the Schutzstaffel, and leading member of the Nazi
Party, Heinrich Himmler, where he would have witnessed at first
hand the construction and implementation of numerous SS policies,
many of which would have been in relation to ethnic cleansing and
the Holocaust. In October 1941, having yearned for a chance at
combat, he changed roles and became a commander in the Waffen-SS,
although he still remained in regular contact with Himmler. As a
member of the 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte, he saw service
in the Soviet Union, Italy and Belgium. On 19 September 1943, he
and his men were responsible for the murder of twenty-four Italian
civilians at the village of Boves. On 17 December 1944, men under
his command were responsible for what became known as the Malmedy
massacre, involving the murder of eighty-four unarmed American
prisoners of war. Following this, between 17 and 20 December,
Peiper and his men were involved in the murder of a number of other
American soldiers, as well as Belgian civilians. Peiper was never
charged with the atrocities at Boves, but in 1946 he faced an
American military tribunal for the Malmedy masssacre. Although
found guilty and sentenced to death, his sentence was reduced to
life imprisonment but he was eventually released in 1956. In 1972,
Peiper moved to the French village of Troves in north east France.
On 14 July 1976, his home was attacked and set on fire. Overcome by
smoke, he died in the flames.
HMS Turbulent was a Royal Navy T-class submarine. From its launch
in May 1941 to when it was lost at sea, along with its entire crew,
in March 1943, it was responsible for the sinking of nearly 100,000
tons of enemy shipping. Besides the number of enemy vessels it
sunk, HMS Turbulent has gone down in history for the attack on the
Italian merchant vessel the Nino Bixio, which at the time was
carrying more than 3,000 Allied POWS who had been captured during
the fighting in North Africa. Having left the Libyan port of
Benghazi on 16 August 1942, accompanied by the Italian cargo vessel
the Sestriere, the Nino Bixio was attacked the following day. A
total of 336 Allied POWs, most of whom were either Australian or
New Zealanders, were killed or died of their wounds in the
explosion. Although badly damaged, the Nino Bixio stayed afloat and
was towed to Navarino, in southern Greece, where the surviving POWs
disembarked. The wounded were treated in hospital, while the rest
were shipped on to POW camps in Bari, Italy. Although there have
been different theories put forward as to how HMS Turbulent met its
end off the Italian coast in 1943, there is still no absolute
certainty as to where, when and how the boat and its crew were
lost.
During the First World War, Etaples, a coastal fishing port
situated on the North-East French coast, 15 miles south of
Boulogne, was a base camp for the British Army, as well as a major
medical facility for wounded and sick troops, including both
British and Canadian hospitals. The Etaples camp also included a
military cemetery, which by the end of the war contained the graves
of more than 11,000 British and British Imperial soldiers. Soldiers
crossing the Channel on their way to the battlefields of the
Western Front found themselves at the Etaples camp, where they
would stay an average of two weeks undergoing further training and
drills. The training staff who oversaw them had a bad reputation
for either their training methods or their lack of genuine military
experience at the Front. The Etaples camp was also part of the
route taken by men on their way back to the UK. Opportunities for
leisure and recreation activities for soldiers away from the camp
could be found in Etaples town. Officers, meanwhile, headed to the
slightly more up-market beach resort of nearby Le Touquet, which
was separated from the Etaples area by the river Canche, and
accessible by a bridge. To ensure it remained 'just for officers,'
pickets, usually members of the Military Police, were placed on the
bridge to enforce its exclusiveness. The men's overall treatment,
conditions in the camp and the poor relationship between them and
members of the Military Police, was a cocktail for disaster,
culminating in a number of incidents in September 1917, which have
collectively become known as the Etaples Mutiny, the full story of
which can be found in this book.
Stalag 383 was somewhat unique as a Second World War prisoner of
war camp. Located in a high valley surrounded by dense woodland and
hills in Hofenfels, Bavaria, it began life in 1938 as a training
ground for the German Army. At the outbreak of war it was
commandeered by the German authorities for use as a prisoner of war
camp for Allied non-commissioned officers, and given the name Oflag
lllC. It was renamed Stalag 383 in November 1942. For most of its
existence it comprised of some 400 huts, 30 feet long and 14 feet
wide, with each typically being home to 14 men. Many of the British
service men who found themselves incarcerated at the camp had been
captured during the evacuations at Dunkirk, or when the Greek
island of Crete fell to the Germans on 1 June 1941. Stalag 383 had
somewhat of a holiday camp feel to it for many who found themselves
prisoners there. There were numerous clubs formed by different
regiments, or men from the same town or county. These clubs catered
for interests such as education, sports, theatrical productions and
debates, to name but a few. This book examines life in the camp,
the escapes that were undertaken from there, and includes a
selection of never before published photographs of the camp and the
men who lived there, many for more than five years.
On 19 August 1942, an Allied amphibious raid took place on the
coastal town of Dieppe in northern France, when a force of some
6,500 infantry soldiers, predominantly Canadian, and supported by a
number of tanks were landed by ships of the Royal Navy under a
blanket of cover provided by the RAF. The official reason for the
raid was to capture the town's port, gather relevant intelligence,
and destroy a number of coastal defences, port structures and other
identified buildings. Allied authorities believed the raid would
not only provide a much-needed boost to Allied morale, but also
demonstrate to Stalin that Britain and the United States were
serious in their commitment to opening a second front, in order to
help the Soviet army fighting on the Eastern Front. It has also
been suggested that the real reason for the raid was to capture a
new German 4-rotor Enigma code machine, along with related code
books. Whatever the reasons for the raid, it was an unmitigated
failure. The German defences were more formidable than intelligence
reports suggested they would be, Allied aerial and naval support
was insufficient, meaning soldiers were unable to achieve their
objectives, and most of the tanks failed to make it off the
beaches. Indeed, due to the unexpected mounting casualties, the
decision was taken to cut short the raid and evacuate the remaining
men.
Operation Dynamo, the successful evacuation of Belgian, British,
Dutch, French and Polish troops from the beaches at Dunkirk between
27 May and 4 June 1940, was not only a pivotal moment of the war,
but one that changed its final outcome. There has been much debate
in the years since the end of the war concerning the "Hitler Halt"
order, which was given to German Panzer units waiting patiently on
the outskirts of Dunkirk to be allowed to finish the job they had
started. Many theories have been put forward as to the reasons
behind this, but the consequence was that it allowed Britain to
remain in the war. A total of 338,226, British and Allied troops
were rescued from the beaches of Dunkirk, aboard a total of 861
vessels, of which 243 were sunk. For those left behind, official
figures record that up to 80,000 French and British troops were
captured, whilst during the time of the actual evacuation,
somewhere in the region of 16,000 French and 1,000 British soldiers
were killed. Equipment wise British forces left behind somewhere in
the region of 90,000 rifles, 11,000 machine guns, huge supplies of
ammunition, 880 field guns, 310 large calibre artillery pieces, 500
anti-aircraft guns, 850 anti-tank guns, 700 tanks, 45,000 cars and
lorries, and 20,000 motor cycles - enough equipment to arm nearly
ten divisions of soldiers. It is known that two atrocities took
place during the Battle of Dunkirk: the Massacre at Le Paradis, and
another at Wormhoudt, carried out by Waffen- SS soldiers, against
British and French troops who had already surrendered. Although the
Battle of Dunkirk must ultimately go down tactically as a German
victory, the rescue of so many of its men, ensured that like a
phoenix, Britain rose from the ashes of defeat to gain a great and
lasting victory.
Because of the geographical location of the Isle of Thanet, it was
always going to play a part in the First World War. For some
wounded British and Commonwealth troops returning from the fighting
in France and Belgium, it was their first sight of England in
months. The Isle of Thanet just happened to be on one of the routes
German Zeppelins and Gotha Bombers took on their way to try and
bomb London, which meant that parts of the district were always
going to be vulnerable from a sudden an unexpected attack from the
air. The Isle of Thanet not only provided thousands of men for
service in the armed forces, but hundreds of men and women to serve
in the Voluntary Aid Detachments that were greatly needed, not just
throughout the Isle of Thanet, but all over Kent, to help deal with
the steady influx of returning wounded soldiers from across the
English Channel. Members of local Territorial units, the 4th
Battalion, The Buffs (East Kent Regiment) and the 3rd (Kent)
Battalion, Royal Field Artillery, were quickly mobilized for war
time service, during the early days of the war, suddenly making
everything so very real for those concerned. Many of the districts
Police Constables, were ex-servicemen, some of whom were still on
the Army Reserve, they too were called up to once again go and
serve with the colours. There was a great clamour across the
country with everybody wanting to do their bit in what ever way
they could, the people of the Isle of Thanet were no different. By
the end of the war, they had certainly played their part in
ensuring that the outcome was a victorious one, making the sadness
of the ones who had paid the ultimate price, slightly easier to
accept.
The question is, how did a once great nation that built an empire
lose it all? From the Meiji Restoration in 1868, restoring Imperial
rule under Emperor Meiji, until Japan's surrender at the end of the
Second World War in 1945, the dream lasted a comparatively short
period of time: seventy-seven years from beginning to end. Under
Emperor Meiji's rule, Imperial Japan began a period of rapid
industrialisation and militarisation, leading to its emergence as a
world power and the establishment of a colonial empire. Economic
and political turmoil in the early 1920s led Japan down the path of
militarism, culminating in her conquest of large parts of the Asian
and Pacific region. The beginning of this path can be traced back
to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, when Japan's proposal for
racial equality was supported and approved by the other members,
but overruled by the American President, Woodrow Wilson. Was this
rebuttal by the West, and in particular the United States, the
moment that changed the course of history? During the empire's
existence, Japan was involved in some sixteen conflicts, resulting
in the occupation of numerous countries and islands throughout Asia
and the Pacific regions. Thousands were under the emperor's
control, not all of whom were treated as they should have been. The
book culminates with the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, which finally brought about Japan's surrender and the end
of the war in Asia and the Pacific.
History has recorded that the first ever powered flight took place
at Kitty Hawk in America, on 17 December 1903 and was carried out
by the Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, who were aircraft
designers and manufacturers. By the time of the outbreak of the
First World War, aviation was only eleven years old. The daddy of
battlefield warfare until that point in time had been the cavalry,
a position it maintained even as war was declared on the Western
Front. Aircraft were not initially seen as an offensive weapon and
were instead used by both sides as observation platforms, or to
take aerial photographs from. Even when they were eventually used
in an offensive capacity, they did not have machine guns attached
to them; if the crew wanted to open fire then they had to use a
pistol or rifle. As the war progressed so the use of aircraft
changed from being an observational tool, to that of a fighter and
bomber aircraft - something that had never been foreseen at the
outbreak of the war. The book then looks at the fighter aces from
all sides. These were pilots who had been credited with shooting or
forcing down a minimum of five enemy aircraft, of which their were
hundreds. While some of these aces survived, many of them were
killed. The most famous fighter ace of all is without doubt the
German pilot known as the Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen.
This book looks at the invaluable work carried out by members of
the Air Transport Auxiliary during the course of the Second World
War. Comprised of both men and women, it was a civilian
organisation tasked with the collection and delivery of military
aircraft from the factories to the RAF and Royal Navy stations. Men
who undertook the role had to be exempt from having to undertake
war time military service due to health or age, but other than that
there were very few restrictions on who who could join, which
accounted for one-legged, one-armed, one-eyed and short sighted
pilots being accepted. Initially it was only men who were allowed
to carry out this service, but by December 1939, British
authorities were persuaded by Pauline Gower (the daughter of Sir
Robert Vaughan Gower, a wartime Conservative MP, and an
accomplished pilot in her own right), to establish a women's
section of the Air Transport Auxiliary, of which she was put in
charge. The first eight women were accepted in to the service, but
it would not be until 1943 that its male and female members
received the same pay. By the end of the war 147 different types of
aircraft had been flown by the men and women of the Air Transport
Auxiliary, including Spitfire fighter aircraft and Lancaster
bombers. These brave pilots were not just British, but came from 28
Commonwealth and neutral countries and their efforts sometimes came
at a price: 174 Air Transport Auxiliary pilots, both men and women,
died during the war whilst flying for the service.
The Holocaust is without doubt one of the most abhorrent and
despicable events not only of the Second World War, but of the
twentieth century. What makes it even more staggering is that it
was not perpetrated by just one individual, but by thousands of men
and women who had become part of the Nazi ideology and belief that
Jews were responsible for all of their woes. This book looks at the
build up to the Second World War, from the time of Hitler's
appointment as Chancellor of Germany in January 1933, as the Nazi
Party rose to power in a country that was still struggling to
recover politically, socially and financially from the aftermath of
the First World War, whilst at the same time, through the enactment
of a number of laws, making life extremely difficult for German
Jews. Some saw the dangers ahead for Jews in Germany and did their
best to get out, some managed to do so, but millions more did not.
The book then moves on to look at a wartime Nazi Germany and how
the dislike of the Jews had gone from painting the star of David on
shop windows, to their mass murder in the thousands of
concentration camp that were scattered throughout Germany. As well
as the camps, it looks at some of those who were culpable for the
atrocities that were carried out in the name of Nazism. Not all
those who were murdered lost their lives in concentration camps.
Some were killed in massacres, some in ghettos and some by the
feared and hated Einsatzgruppen.
The Isle of Sheppey, although not a heavily populated area, played
an extremely important part in Great Britain s war effort on the
home front throughout the four and a half years of the First World
War. In doing so, Sheppey provided protection for the Thames
Estuary, the River Medway and the naval shipyards at both Sheerness
and Chatham. Its defensive emplacements largely responsible for
acquiring the nickname locally of the 'Barbed Wire Island.' One of
its main claims to fame in relation to the years of the First World
War would have undoubtedly been in relation to aviation. The island
had been a hive of activity in relation to flying since the
beginning of the twentieth century, when the Royal Aero Club came
to Leysdown, making it the first airfield in England. What became
Eastchurch Aerodrome was where the first pilots of the Royal Naval
Air Service were trained, making it the first military flying
school in the country. The Short brothers also had an aircraft
factory at Eastchurch where they designed and built their own
aircraft, some of which would be used during the First World War.
The Isle of Sheppey also boasted another aircraft factory, which
was situated at Shellbeach on the east coast of the island, an
emergency landing strip at Harty on the south east side of the
island, and a balloon station at Sheerness. The First World War
certainly saw the Isle of Sheppey rise to the occasion and add to
its long and illustrious military history. The part it played went
a long way in enhancing the island s reputation of having a dogged
determination to do what needed to be done for the greater good in
the nations time of need.
Chatham played a very important part in the nation's Great War
effort. It was one of the British Royal Navy's three 'Manning
Ports', with more than a third of the town's ships manned by men
allocated to the Chatham Division. The war was only 6 weeks old
when Chatham felt the affects of war for the first time. On 22
September 1914, three Royal Naval vessels from the Chatham
Division, HMS Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue, were sunk in quick
succession by a German submarine, U-9. A total of 1,459 men lost
their lives that day, 1,260 of whom were from the Chatham Division.
Two months later, on 26 November, the battleship HMS Bulwark
exploded and sunk whilst at anchor off of Sheerness on the Kent
coast. There was a loss of 736 men, many of whom were from the
Chatham area. On 18 August 1914, Private 6737 Walter Henry Smith,
who was nineteen and serving with the 6th Battalion, Middlesex
Regiment, became the first person to be killed during wartime
Chatham. He was on sentry duty with a colleague, who accidentally
dropped his loaded rifle, discharging a bullet that strook Private
Smith and killed him. It wasn't all doom and gloom, however.Winston
Churchill, as the First Lord of the Admiralty, visited Chatham
early on in the war, on 30 August 1914. On 18 September 1915, two
German prisoners of war, Lieutenant Otto Thelen and Lieutenant Hans
Keilback, escaped from Donnington Hall in Leicestershire. At first,
it was believed they had escaped the country and were on their way
back to Germany, but they were re-captured in Chatham four days
later. By the end of the war, Chatham and the men who were
stationed there had truly played their part in ensuring a historic
Allied victory.
The First World War was fought on two fronts. In a military sense
it was fought on the battlefields throughout Europe, the Gallipoli
peninsular and other such theatres of war, but on the Home Front it
was the arduous efforts of women that kept the country running.
Before the war women in the workplace were employed in such jobs as
domestic service, clerical work, shop assistants, teachers or as
barmaids. These jobs were nearly all undertaken by single women, as
once they were married their job swiftly became that a of a wife,
mother and home maker. The outbreak of the war changed all of that.
Suddenly, women were catapulted into a whole new sphere of work
that had previously been the sole domain of men. Women began to
work in munitions factories, as nurses in military hospitals, bus
drivers, mechanics, taxi drivers, as well as running homes and
looking after children, all whilst worrying about their men folk
who were away fighting a war in some foreign clime, not knowing if
they were ever going to see them again.With the work came a wage,
which provided women with financial freedom for the first time, as
well as an element of independence and social integration, which
they would have possibly never otherwise experienced. Women were
not paid the same wages as men for doing the same work, but what
they did earn was much more than they had ever earned before. This
was also a time of the suffrage movement, who wanted more out of
life for women. Accordingly, some of these women were reluctant to
stop working, with some of these being sacked so that returning
soldiers could have their pre-war jobs back. Whilst, tens of
thousands of women were left widowed, many with young children to
bring up. Despite all of this, one thing was for sure, for lots of
women there was no going back to how things had been before the
war. There was only going to be one way, and that was forward.
This book isn't a story it's an historical account of what life was
like for the German POW's who spent time incarcerated in Camp 266
at Langdon Hills in Essex. The camp opened just before the end of
the Second World War and saw the arrival of its first inhabitants
in April 1945 before finally closing its doors in June 1948. The
camp could hold up to 800 prisoners at a time and also had
satellite camps at nearby places such as Tillingham and Purfleet.
It includes accounts from some of the prisoners themselves, looking
at what they did before the outbreak of the war. It then looks at
how and where they were captured, their time spent at the camp and
what they did after the war on their release. Some met local girls,
fell in love, married and began new lives living in England. Their
personal stories along with newspaper articles of the day,
prisoners letters as well as other documents, help bring the book
to life giving it a truly unique feeling. There are stories from
some of the local residents who lived through it all and got to
know some of the POW's quite closely. In some cases this included
inviting them in to their homes and befriending them. Some of these
friendships lasted for years after the war. Only the passage of
time causing some of them to finally succumb. Read their stories
and find yourself transported back in time to a bygone era that was
the start of a new begining for all of us.
Walter Tull would have been a remarkable individual no matter when
he had been born, but to achieve what he did, during the time that
he did, makes him even more remarkable. He was an orphan at just
six years of age, and despite not wanting to, his step mother,
Clara, had no choice but to place him and his elder brother,
Edward, in to a children's home in the East End of London. As
neither Walter or Edward had ever travelled outside of Folkestone
before, the upheaval must have come as quite a shock. Two years
after entering the home, Walter and Edward were split up when
Edward was adopted and went to live in Glasgow. Walter's sporting
prowess saw him play for top local amateur side, Clapton Football
club, signing for them in 1908, but it was to be a short lived
affair, as by the following year he had signed as a professional
for the prestigious Tottenham Hotspur Football Club, making his
first team debut against Manchester United. In October 1911 Walter
was transferred to Northampton Town Football Club, where he would
go on to play over one hundred first team games, before the First
World War brought a premature end to his career as a professional
footballer. With the outbreak of war, Walter wasted no time
enlisting in the British Army, initially as a Private in the newly
formed 17th (Football) Battalion, Middlesex Regiment. Further
promotions followed and in no time at all he had reached the rank
of Sergeant. He was put forward for a commission and passed out as
a 2nd Lieutenant on 29 May 1917\. He went on to become the first
black officer in the British Army, to lead white troops in to
battle, and was fondly regarded by the men who served under him.
Walter was killed in action whilst leading his men in a counter
attack against German defensive positions on Monday 25 March 1918\.
He died a hero. He was well liked and respected by all who knew
him. Like many men of his generation his life was cut short for the
greater good whilst in the service of his country, so that others
might prevail.
The Korean War (1950-53) is often referred to by many British and
Commonwealth veterans who took part in it as the 'forgotten war', a
reference which does not include themselves or the families and
friends of those who were killed. On 15 August 1945, US and Soviet
forces liberated Korea from the Japanese and the country was
subsequently divided along the 38th parallel, with the Soviets
administering the northern part of the country and the Americans
the south. Tensions between the two states continued, with both
governments claiming to be the legitimate government of Korea. This
came to a head on 25 June 1950, when the Korean People's Army of
North Korea crossed the 38th parallel into South Korea. For nearly
four months the fighting swung first one way then the other, before
forces from South Korea and other UN countries chased the North
Koreans towards the Chinese border, which in turn saw China enter
the war on the side of North Korea on 19 October. Having initially
refused to send troops to Korea due to commitments in Malaya, the
British government was worried about the possibility of China
threatening Hong Kong, which at the time was under British control.
A combination of the worsening situation in Korea, concerns about
its position as a major global power, and the potential damage to
its relationship with the US, caused a change of heart and, on 29
August, British forces finally arrived in South Korea. During the
course of the Korean War, the Victoria Cross was awarded on just
four occasions, although two other men were also awarded the
equivalent George Cross. The Victoria Cross was twice awarded
posthumously, with a third recipient dying in 1986 and the fourth
dying in July 2018\. Each of the actions which led to the awards
are discussed in this book, which in the case of Bill Speakman,
includes an interview he gave to the author in 2017.
Before the outbreak of the First World War, the Channel Islands
were viewed as they are today; scenic, sunny and relaxing holiday
destinations, where it was possible to briefly escape from the
hustle and bustle of everyday life. As soon as the fighting began,
the immediate worry was the threat of a German invasion to the
Islands, which are much closer to the coast line of France than
they are to the southern coast line of Great Britain. Both men and
women alike played their part. Men by either joining one of the
islands Militia or enlisting in one of the numerous regiments of
the British Army, including the 'Jersey Pals', and the men who
served with the Royal Irish Fusiliers, the Royal Irish Rifles and
the Royal Irish Regiment. The book looks at the pride in the
commitment and achievements of the Channel Islands' very own Royal
Guernsey Light Infantry, formed in December 1916. The Islands'
women volunteered in their droves to serve with the British Red
Cross' Voluntary Aid Detachments, but not just throughout the
Channel Islands, but to mainland Great Britain, and further afield
in Belgium and France and other similar theatres of war. As far as
most people are aware, the first time German soldiers stepped foot
in the Channel Islands, was when their troops landed unopposed in
June 1940 during the Second World War. However, between 1915 and
1917, some 2,000 German prisoners of war, were held captive at the
Les Blanches Banques camp. The book closes by taking a look at the
men from all of the Islands who voluntarily went off to war, and
ended up paying the ultimate price and didn't make it back home to
their loved ones.
Two days before the outbreak of the Second World War, the British
government imposed blackout regulations across the nation as it was
believed that in the event of war, Germany would very quickly begin
conducting air raids on British towns and cities. The measures
included covering windows in a dark, thick material at night to
ensure no light could be seen from the outside. The use of vehicle
headlamps was also prohibited, which resulted in a number of
accidents and pedestrians being killed. These restrictions,
enforced by Air Raid Precaution wardens and the police, were for
the benefit and safety of the British public, but it also
unintentionally made life a lot less dangerous for members of the
criminal fraternity, allowing them to go about their regular night
time activities with less chance of being caught by the police. As
a result, during one week in February 1942, Gordon Cummins, RAF,
was able to move around freely to carry out his attacks and make it
back to his billet without being caught, or even stopped, by the
police. The very restrictions put in place to protect the British
public from German bombers actually placed women in danger from men
such as Cummins: three of his victims were known prostitutes, as
was at least one of the two women he is known to have attacked, but
who survived. All of Cummins victims were attacked during the hours
of darkness whilst the blackou? was in place, leading to him
becoming known as the Blackout Ripper.
With the outbreak of the First World War, it was not surprising
that a number of individuals who were of German decent, and who
lived in Hartlepool and its surrounding areas, were rounded up and
detained by the British military authorities, in the interests of
both national security and for their own personal safety. They were
held at the towns Stranton Ice Rink. Their numbers included the
ex-German Consul for the Hartlepool's district as well as others
who had been local residents of many years standing. The first
soldier with connections to Hartlepool to be killed on foreign soil
during the war, was Corporal 57561 John Robert Richardson, who was
serving with the 54th Battery, Royal Field Artillery, when he was
killed in action on 4 October 1914. He is buried at the Bergen
Communal Cemetery at Mons. The war came to Hartlepool on the
morning of Wednesday, 16 December 1914 in the shape of three
vessels of the Imperial German Navy. By the time their attack was
over, more than 1,100 artillery shells had landed on the town,
killing 9 soldiers, 86 civilians and wounding a further 438.
Amongst the dead was 29 year old Private 18/295 Theophilus Jones of
the 18th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry, making him the first
British serviceman to be killed on British soil as a result of
enemy action during the course of the First World War. Before the
war was over, his brother Alfred, would also be killed, during
fighting at the Battle of Arras, on 3 May 1917. By the time the war
had ended, some 1700 men and women from Hartlepool and its
surrounding areas had paid the ultimate price of having served
their King and country.
Stalag XXA was a Second World War German POW camp for
non-commissioned officers located in Nazi occupied Torun, in
northern Poland. The camp consisted of fifteen forts, which in
September 1939, under the name of Stalag 357, was used to house
Polish POWs who were captured after German forces had taken the
Polish fort at Westerplatte. British POWs didn't arrive at the camp
until June 1940, and were those captured during the Allied campaign
in Norway, the evacuations of the British at Dunkirk, and the men
of the 51st (Highland) Division at St. Valery. At its peak, the
camp housed more than 10,000 men and was liberated by Russian
forces on 1 February 1945. This book examines in detail what life
was like in the camp for those held there, which over the course of
the war numbered more than 60,000 men, including Polish, French,
Belgians, British, Yugoslavians, Russians, Americans, Italians and
Norwegians. The bulk of the book is based on a diary kept by
Leonard Parker, a POW at Stalag XXA who was forced to undertake a
march from the camp, commencing on 19 January 1945, taking himself
and his comrades to the Russian port of Odessa. It was a difficult
march undertaken in harsh wintery conditions, where lack of food,
the cold, and the fear of death were their constant companions. The
final leg of their liberation saw the men of Stalag XXA board the
_Duchess of Richmond_ at Odessa, before arriving at Greenock,
Scotland, on 17 April 1945, and finally finding their freedom.
Magic mushrooms can affect.Religion was left to self discovery.
With adolescent years spent racing bikes and cheating death the
author met many strange circumstances. He tried illicit substances
leading to his breakdown on his 33rd birthday. He was diagnosed as
Bi-polar (Manic-Depressive) and wants to take you down the road of
his manic delusions, in verse. A parody you will never forget! A
parody that might make you think about taking another hit. Take the
journey lf discovery with a more tangable view of the world,
leading to the finding a far more Greater being truly exists. It
will grip by the page and will keep you mesmerized to the very
last. Don't read if you are wise!A fictional truth.
The City of London was always going to be an obvious target for
German bombers during the Second World War. What better way for
Nazi Germany to spread fear and panic amongst the British people
than by attacking their capital city?Although not vastly populated
in the same way that a bigger city or larger town would be, there
were still enough people working there during the day for attacks
on it to take their toll. The city's ancient and iconic buildings
also bore the brunt of the German bombs, including churches
designed by Sir Christopher Wren after the Great Fire in 1666. The
book looks at the effects of war on the City of London, including
the damage caused by the 8 months of the Blitz between September
1940 and May 1941. The most devastating of the raids took place on
29 December 1940, with both incendiary and explosive bombs causing
a firestorm so intense it was known as the Second Great Fire of
London. It also looks at the bravery of the staff at St Bart's
Hospital, which was one of the medical facilities that remained
open during the course of the war. Other stories include the
sterling work carried out by the City's civilian population and the
different voluntary roles that they performed to help keep the city
safe, including the Home Guard and the Fire Watchers, who spent
their nights on the city's rooftops looking out for incendiary
devices dropped by the German Luftwaffe. Despite the damage to its
buildings and its population, by the end of the war the City of
London was able to rise, like a phoenix, from the flames of
destruction, ready to become the vibrant and flourishing borough
that it is today.
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