Stories from the Blitz | Documentary

Фильм және анимация

From September 1940 to May 1941, Germany launched an air attack against Britain, coined the Blitz. Air raid sirens going off, the rush to get to shelter and waiting for bombs overhead to land, this documentary looks back at individuals’ stories to see what it was like to live through such a terrifying time.
Stories from the Blitz features new interviews with those who were there and amazing archive footage of the devastation, and of human courage and sheer will to survive one of Britain’s darkest periods in History.
Director : Bruce Vigar
0:00 Full Documentary
0:28 🔥 The Blitz begins in London in 1940, causing devastation and changing the country for decades to come.
7:42 🏘️ Evacuation during World War II: Children and women were sent to the countryside for safety, experiencing a new way of life.
13:54 🌍 During World War II, children were evacuated from their homes but many eventually returned. Enemy aliens, including Jewish refugees, were rounded up and sent to internment camps in the Isle of Man and other countries.
21:05 ✈️ During World War II, spies were discovered in Britain and a new Act was passed to punish them with death. The blackout regulations and scrap drives became part of everyday life.
30:22 💣 The Luftwaffe successfully bombed Coventry using their radar system, causing significant damage and casualties.
36:19 🌃 During World War II, Britain lacked night fighter aircraft and relied on ground control for instructions, but early experiments with radar-equipped bombers and Turbinlite flights were not successful.
44:14 💣 The Blitz during World War II had devastating effects on London, with civilians facing danger, looters, and the need for ticketing in underground shelters.
51:15 ✈️ The bombing raids on British cities during World War II and the introduction of V-1 flying bombs
58:34 💣 The V-1 and V-2 attacks during World War II caused significant damage and casualties in London and Kent.
1:06:11 💣 London endured devastating V-2 attacks during World War II, resulting in thousands of deaths, destruction of homes and buildings, and widespread fear and illness among the population.

Пікірлер: 459

  • @christopherbutler7588
    @christopherbutler758810 ай бұрын

    So great to see my mum on this video Talking about when they got bombed out one night. She is 94 know. Tough generation All what they went through.

  • @BevMattocks

    @BevMattocks

    8 ай бұрын

    My mum's 96 and her family used to take in bombed out families from Liverpool when they lived in Southport. My mum went to Uni in London towards the end of the war and remembers air crew who'd been shot down in flames and whose faces were being reconstructed at the hospital next door to the uni, sitting at the back of her uni lectures to pass the time.

  • @jackie6343

    @jackie6343

    8 ай бұрын

    Aww that's lovely,my mum lived through the Blitz too,she's 97 now ❤

  • @margaretcastell9429

    @margaretcastell9429

    7 ай бұрын

    How amazing to have this precious souvenir and to know she is still with us. I was born in Birmingham in 1941, the hospital was actually struck by a bomb when I emerged. My poor mother was a wreck and father on one of his several war jobs. None of us will forget this time and pass it down to our children. ❤

  • @margaretcastell9429

    @margaretcastell9429

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@BevMattocks those poor men would have been horribly disfigured by burns. At least we had just been introduced to penicillin to hopefully prevent infection. Young fellows maimed for life as restorative surgery was so new.

  • @a.nelprober-rl5cf

    @a.nelprober-rl5cf

    7 ай бұрын

    Nobody f*cking asked!!!

  • @mariafrancademarchi6737
    @mariafrancademarchi673710 ай бұрын

    Good morning. I am Italian and when Italy went in war I was 18 months old. The first thing I remember is the first bombing over Milano, when I was 2 years old, and this has signed my entire life. This excellent film should be shown in each school because the memory of how devastating the war is in everyone life be not forgotten. I apologise for my bad use of the English language.

  • @jean6872

    @jean6872

    10 ай бұрын

    Countries of the European Union will never fight each other again.

  • @marco5718

    @marco5718

    10 ай бұрын

    Lei ha ragione. Questo film dovrebbe essere proiettato in ogni scuola in modo che non possiamo mai dimenticare the devastazione della guerra.

  • @romans325kjb

    @romans325kjb

    10 ай бұрын

    You did fine 👍 with English language. Blessings to you 🙏.

  • @helenchristinarees4335

    @helenchristinarees4335

    10 ай бұрын

    I think your English is very good 😊

  • @sharynkhan1104

    @sharynkhan1104

    10 ай бұрын

    Your English is better than my Italian.

  • @davidjma7226
    @davidjma722610 ай бұрын

    My parents, both Londoners, met in a bomb shelter in the middle of the 1940 Blitz and were married in Peckam in 1942. They were tough people in those years!

  • @Thathairdresserguy

    @Thathairdresserguy

    10 ай бұрын

    Wow that’s amazing to think about

  • @edhespin4104

    @edhespin4104

    10 ай бұрын

    Very interesting. I wish I knew them..💪👍

  • @davidjma7226

    @davidjma7226

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Thathairdresserguy Yeah. I still have the pics and marriage certificate. Extraordinary.

  • @dancingwithfools

    @dancingwithfools

    9 ай бұрын

    Wow how about that

  • @Ira88881

    @Ira88881

    9 ай бұрын

    There was a tragedy in one of the metro stations, right? Many people died?

  • @markgeary5897
    @markgeary58979 ай бұрын

    My mum now 91 lived through all of this,the blitz,doodle bugs,V2s wasnt evacuated from London.Still drives herself about,recounts everything in clear details Unfortunately all the men are dead now from that era in my family(RAF)but talking to her they survive.This generation were tough and had a great spirit.

  • @georgielancaster1356

    @georgielancaster1356

    9 ай бұрын

    Oh PLEASE, get a voice recorder and get her to tell all the stories. Start with asking her about her childhood, it relaxes people. Then ask her about the different family members, and what she remembers about what they did. Who was the best singer or dancer. Who was the dog lover? Who was the joker. Answering these questions can get them relaxed, so the memories flow. Try to get a 2nd copy made. Give one to one of the official sites and keep one for the family. Spread them.around the family, as inevitably, some people lose them. If you get a big amount, maybe contact pen and sword publishers and see if they want to work with an author, to turn it into a book.

  • @knitwit7082

    @knitwit7082

    5 ай бұрын

    georgielancaster1356 • What a wonderful idea! I could listen to those stories all day. There is a series of video stories of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust that were done by USC (where my daughter graduated.) While sad, they deserve to have their stories heard, repeated, and remembered so that these tragedies will never be repeated. Again, what a great idea. I hope people whose families fought in the WWs will do this so others may learn what their lives were like.back then. 😁

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    markgeary. I'm an exact contemporary of your mother (92, 3 months ago) and I have very similar memories, obviously. On thing that makes me very angry, is when people today, up to about the age of 40, maybe even older, who have not the slightest idea of what war is like, denigrate and criticise those who lived through this. It is blatant - saying things like we shouldn't have fought Hitler, we shouldn't have bombed Germany so heavily, Dresden was a war crime, and so on. They should look at those pictures of London, Coventry et al. Even with the relatively slighter fire power (compared with later in the war) of the Luftwaffe attackers, the scale of the damage and loss of life was tragic and very widespread. Do these idiots think that if, in 1940, the Germans had had the capability of 1944/45 they would not have used it? Given the chance, at that time they would have totally obliterated the areas they attacked. And today we hear idiotic presenters (one is called Piers something I believe) and journalists, burbling on about 'proportionate response'. When you have suffered in war, you know damn well that you don't win a war by mounting a 'proportionate' response, that only prolongs it, it doesn't finish it. Am I the only one to have noticed all this?

  • @janebrown1706

    @janebrown1706

    7 күн бұрын

    I saw an interview by a jewish lady who was locked up in a place above Dresden during the bombing and said it was the best she'd ever seen.

  • @susandelongis885
    @susandelongis8858 ай бұрын

    My dad, bless him, an Italian American flew bombing missions out of England with the Army Air Corp. He was just a kid, but the story of how he earned his bronze stars was harrowing, a story my uncle told us after my dad’s death. Like many veterans he didn’t discuss his war experiences. He only did share his love for the British people, something he also expressed by creating a beautiful oil painting of an English village. I inherited this deep appreciation. This exceptional documentary illustrates some of the strengths of the people we admire so much and I’m proud that my dad served beside in the war effort. May The Lord bless our nations with lasting friendship and peace. ❤️🇺🇸❤️🇬🇧❤️

  • @emmsue1053

    @emmsue1053

    7 ай бұрын

    My USA Dad came here just after the war for five years as he was an electrical engineer & Britain badly help with infrastructure. Thank you to all those who were brave allies.

  • @GMT439

    @GMT439

    6 ай бұрын

    Proof of all CLAIMS Required.

  • @pcerel

    @pcerel

    6 ай бұрын

    My dad worked in the control tower of the Army Air Force in Ipswich England

  • @davidgillettuk9638

    @davidgillettuk9638

    4 ай бұрын

    Amen 🙏

  • @Hannah-Clarke-uk
    @Hannah-Clarke-uk10 ай бұрын

    My great aunt Laura lived though the blitz, one time she didn’t want to get out of bed and her Anderson shelter was bombed, another time she was in her newly rebuilt Anderson shelter and her house was bombed. A very lucky lady

  • @stevelee4952
    @stevelee495210 ай бұрын

    My mum and dad were both from east London, near the East India Docks. They were housed in the same village in Dorset , never met but married 8 years later. The old boy , bless him, died aged 65 but our mum is now 94 and misses her George every day of her life

  • @romans325kjb

    @romans325kjb

    10 ай бұрын

    So sad for the children. (+The adults of course). Todays kids/teens do not have a clue.

  • @marywelch5194

    @marywelch5194

    10 ай бұрын

    Curious. Are the East India Docks named for the East India Company?

  • @georgielancaster1356

    @georgielancaster1356

    9 ай бұрын

    What a romantic story.

  • @davidrobinson8337

    @davidrobinson8337

    5 ай бұрын

    Please thank her,

  • @oneviewcornwall8200
    @oneviewcornwall820010 ай бұрын

    My mum (born 1937) was there with her mum in the air raid shelter on Goswell Road EC1 down in the basement of the C&A building - my mum wasn't evacuated. My mum shared her memories and fortunately I have many recordings of my mum's memories despite her very young age. Love you mum, miss you everyday, your stories and amazing memories of the blitz 💛

  • @BestDoc

    @BestDoc

    10 ай бұрын

    @oneviewcornwall8200 Sorry for your loss.

  • @oneviewcornwall8200

    @oneviewcornwall8200

    10 ай бұрын

    @@BestDoc thank you so much 🌿

  • @smileandpresson
    @smileandpresson8 ай бұрын

    A terrific documentary. I'd love more like this! Gave me better understanding for what my Granny went through. Truly the greatest generation.

  • @gavinkitchen1472
    @gavinkitchen147210 ай бұрын

    In 1976, I stayed in a 6 person Bomb Shelter with 4 other people for 48 hrs. We ate down there, & cooked tea. The toilet was a bucket. With 5 people using the bucket, it smelled. The experience was absolutely horrible,uncomfortable smelly, & very cramped. This was in peace time, ie no.bombs dropping. I'm glad I was convinced to go through this experience, I have the utmost respect for everyone who lived through these horrific Wars.

  • @stephenperretti8847

    @stephenperretti8847

    10 ай бұрын

    @gavin... Who sponsored the experiment?

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    .......what war was going on in London in 1976?

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    ......Okay, thanks for the added info!

  • @gavinkitchen1472

    @gavinkitchen1472

    7 ай бұрын

    @stephenperretti8847 you find them all over the UK.& in many other Countries its not uncommon to buy a property in the UK & there is an underground bunker in the garden. Many have been demolished, converted etc, but there are still many WW2 & Cold War bunkers remaining. Of course bunkers come in many different varieties. Some People might have s 1 room underground bunker in their garden or basement. 1 room could be as basic as a small concrete room, with very basic amenities, such as a bucket & bottles for a toilet. Paranoid multi millionares might of built themselves a luxurious doomsday bunker with as many rooms & as many luxurious as they like. There are Community bunkers, Government bunkers, etc. Government bunkers are designed so that the Politician's can live there with their families & run the Country. The most famous bunker in the UK, is the Churchill War Rooms. As the bunker i stayed in was built under somebody's garden & they were the same People that owned the Property. It was a simple process of just opening the hatch & climbing in. There was pretty much nothing down there that was useful as it had not been used since WW2. So we imagined it was War Time & we only had a couple of minutes. Someone was smart enough to bring a bucket & empty milk bottles, otherwise it was on the floor. Apart from that it was whatever we brought with us. I had some sandwiches, we all had blankets, pillows & basic bedding. Cell phones didn't work 99% of the time. Could only get a very faint signal on rare occasions. Someone else brought Tea, Coffee, Cups, sugar, but no milk. We forgot that. We did have lots of water. Anyway we got very little sleep, pretty much staying up for 2 days, as I reckon that's what you'd probably do in a real situation. Ie the first 2 days you'd be too stressed to sleep.

  • @JME-TV

    @JME-TV

    7 ай бұрын

    5 days? You were in a shelter for few hours at most ! Why would you stay in one for 5 days haha

  • @christinamarie3598
    @christinamarie35985 ай бұрын

    This effected my mother as a child all through her life .. many of her life lessons and codes of honor were cemented surviving this

  • @karenmihranian9707
    @karenmihranian970710 ай бұрын

    I have watched so many documentaries and read so many books about WW2. When u realise what people went through. The lose suffering and pain. The courage and determination to fight on. So many people came together to give a helping hand. The input of women in the war effort. Amazing that's what makes a nation great.

  • @AndyJarman

    @AndyJarman

    9 ай бұрын

    And the kids, that evacuee worked on the trawlers, dangerous and hard work, even without U boats and mines! He thrived on it though! When American aircraft carriers visit (Perth Western Australia) it is shocking to see how young and naive the people who fight wars are. They are nearly all black - no doubt putting your life on the line is a hand up for many. It seems shameful that our children fight our wars, not the adults, the well heeled, those that profit from it, but the kids from poor homes.

  • @nomadpi1

    @nomadpi1

    4 ай бұрын

    They adapted. They got by. Life went on. That's the genius of our species.

  • @CJ-ft9yo

    @CJ-ft9yo

    Ай бұрын

    What gets me is how they did all of this on very little food. Very tough generation, they had to become this

  • @davidrobinson8337
    @davidrobinson83375 ай бұрын

    God bless those folks. They went through a time in which they were fighting for their very lives. We sure as hell could learn a lot from them. God bless them all.

  • @JM-cs3dc

    @JM-cs3dc

    5 ай бұрын

    David Robinson Listen carefully to Israel

  • @sallygardiner7150
    @sallygardiner71509 ай бұрын

    I was born in Bristol in 1940 , in the midst of a huge bombing raid. Bombing in Bristol was regular and devastating . People walked out of the city to spend the nights in fields, returning the next morning to go to school, or do a full days work. Bristol suffered terribly, but is very very rarely mentioned. Files have only recently been allowed to be opened, and there are others still sealed under protection. There was much resentment that the King and Churchill never visited, as they did in London's east end, and Coventry. It is now known that it was purposeful; Churchill did not want the Germans to know how successful the bombing was, so there was very little allowed to be published in the British press. German bombers targeted the churches, to try and break moral. But there was an important - underground - oil pipeline from Avonmouth, that went under the Bristol Channel, through Wales, to Liverpool, that fuelled the vitally important ships braving the North Atlantic convoys; bringing in food and essential materials for armaments that were critical, enabling the war effort. I do hope that soon, Bristolians will get the recognition they deserve, for their very important contribution towards winning the war.

  • @PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim

    @PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim

    8 ай бұрын

    "German bombers targeted the churches, to try and break moral. " That's absolute nonsense. Several thousand feet up, in the dark there was no precision bombing. They got roughly over the target and opened the doors. The bombs landed where they landed. Who on earth told you that poppycock?

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    sallygardiner. Don't hold your breath. They are too busy blaming the people of Bristol for something that happened a couple of hundred years ago, and was nothing to do with them, than to consider how they suffered in the war.

  • @nomadpi1

    @nomadpi1

    4 ай бұрын

    Sealing files is a criminal act in a Republic or a Democracy. The public has a right to know everything and governments sealing files must mean a propaganda effort is in process.

  • @philipr1567

    @philipr1567

    4 ай бұрын

    I agree. We remember the Royal Navy and the merchant navy bringing supplies across the Atlantic, but we haven't given sufficient credit to the people in the seaports who unloaded, repaired, and fueled the ships, as well as the transport workers who kept distribution flowing and the civilian population who were bombed again and again. I think it is no exaggeration to say that if the major seaport cities (especially Liverpool and Bristol) had been destroyed the UK would have been starved into submission.

  • @philipr1567

    @philipr1567

    4 ай бұрын

    @@nomadpi1 I think you are over-simplifying the issue of sealed files. Every nation keeps secrets to protect national interrests - this is not necessarily about propaganda. However, it can be argued that the 'hundred year rule' for some secrets may be excessive.

  • @adrianthomas6667
    @adrianthomas666710 ай бұрын

    My family would gather at Christmas with relatives and friends , this was in the early seventies, remembering the war years and shared experiences. They would play Vera Lynn records and as a youth I could feel the palpable atmosphere which was created amongst them. Indescribable & unforgettable.

  • @user-qn2un8tj4t

    @user-qn2un8tj4t

    10 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a good ol cockney knees up 🎉

  • @AngelitoSastrillo-vx5ei

    @AngelitoSastrillo-vx5ei

    9 ай бұрын

    Cf tc

  • @nomadpi1

    @nomadpi1

    4 ай бұрын

    We'll meet again...

  • @mikehefford6499
    @mikehefford64998 ай бұрын

    During the November raid on Coventry my mum, aged 21, happened to be staying overnight with her aunt and uncle just outside the city centre but near to a railway line. When the raid started they were in the house and took shelter under the stairs. A bomb landed in the street not far from their house and she saw their front door go flying past them. Fortunately that was the most serious damage to them but there was a massive creater in the street and serious damage to other houses.

  • @philipr1567
    @philipr15674 ай бұрын

    Many families have stories to tell, and these should not be forgotten. My mum was 7 when the war began, living in Tooting (South London) with her parents; when she was evacuated my grandmother went to Essex to stay with her sister while Grandad stayed behind working, growing vegetables, and waiting to be called up. One morning he came out of the shelter (in the neighbour's garden) to see that the house windows had been blown out and roof tiles dislodged; one bomb had wrecked a house two doors away, another hit a house across the road, and the school at the end of the garden had been hit - three of the thousands of bombs dropped that night, each exploding less than forty feet away from my grandad. Two of mum's uncles were kept busy - my great-uncle Fred (WW1 Royal Navy veteran) was a firefighter based at West Ham, and my great-uncle Charles (WW1 army veteran) was a Heavy Rescue volunteer in Southwark digging survivors and dead bodies from the wreckage. My great-uncles never talked about what they had seen and done, but they were both commended for bravery and were plagued by nightmares for the rest of their lives.

  • @lylaclark3977
    @lylaclark39776 ай бұрын

    My dear Grandfather, a Dublin Man, was an Air Raid Warden in London during the Blitz, he would always send his wages home to my Grandmother to provide for her and their young family at that time, in which my dear Mum was a 10 yr old girl. He was a brave and honourable man God rest his soul 💛, as Air Raid Wardens really were on the Frontlines of such devastation in London at that time, doing their best to care for the People of London during the Blitz. I have such Respect for my Granddad who did his part as an Irish Man during WWII and managing to provide for his young family back in Dublin in such difficult times . They were a determined Generation ! Much respect and thanks to all of them still .

  • @dsouza4746
    @dsouza474610 ай бұрын

    My mother was born in Portugal and she told me that my grandparents took in several English children during the war. She told me that they would play in the grape vines as small children with them and that’s how my mom started to learn English. My grandfather and family immigrated to Santa Clara California after the war,

  • @longwhitemane
    @longwhitemane9 ай бұрын

    I have a friend who is in his 80's and was 3 years old at the time of the Blitz. I've shown him some pictures of people taking shelter in the underground. He got tears in his eyes looking at them.

  • @sharonread7674
    @sharonread767410 ай бұрын

    Really good documentary. Could be used in school history lessons. Top job. 👍

  • @user-st7nu3ij3v
    @user-st7nu3ij3v6 ай бұрын

    My dad in the RAF at the time was visiting his aunts in primrose hill for tea. An air raid ensued and my father hit the deck and crawled under the table. His aunties sat calmly drinking thier tea and were heard to say tour brave boys! They had not been able to distinguish between AkAk and german bombs.

  • @davidrobinson8337

    @davidrobinson8337

    5 ай бұрын

    'I'd kinda feel sheepish.. I mean if those ladies werent scared why should i be ?

  • @Brunette_Rapunzel
    @Brunette_Rapunzel10 ай бұрын

    I'm with Oversimplified, "These people had balls of steel!" I have alot of respect for Londoners of that time.

  • @JM-cs3dc

    @JM-cs3dc

    5 ай бұрын

  • @mudpyz
    @mudpyz9 ай бұрын

    As soon as you talked about the beaufighter I remembered a new zealander Albie Carr he flew his beaufighter in Norway during the night I nursed his wife Joyce she was so proud of her Albie

  • @SectorSos
    @SectorSos10 ай бұрын

    What a great documentary. Cheers from the USA 🇺🇲. War is horrible. Im a retired US Army combat veteran. With multiple deployments to Iraq, Afghanistan, Africa etc. But can't imagine a WW2 scale war. What an informative documentary. Thanks 👍

  • @alexcarter8807

    @alexcarter8807

    10 ай бұрын

    Aha one of the Peace Creeps(tm) has crawled out from under its rock. You know, the same brand of creep that didn't want us to pick on poor old Hitler, the same creeps who were America First! isolationists, said the Nazis were just peaceful folk who just wanted their "lebensraum". @@swisscottagecleanairaction

  • @louisebb4183

    @louisebb4183

    10 ай бұрын

    No one is saying why the US wasn’t helping from the start ? Was it because they have been making money of selling the oil for Germans Messerschmitt that was attacking Britain? Only when their own borders were under threat then they woken up and joined.

  • @taliabraver

    @taliabraver

    10 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much!

  • @Linda-io2ns

    @Linda-io2ns

    9 ай бұрын

    Thanks , and thank you to the American soldiers based in England during the war,

  • @davidrobinson8337

    @davidrobinson8337

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Linda-io2ns Thank you for remembering them,,, I couldnt begin to imagine what those folks endured,

  • @Jen.K
    @Jen.K10 ай бұрын

    My parents are both in their 90's still alive and remember being children during the blitz. My dad lived in London and was sent to the country, he said it was a nice time because the family he stayed with were very kind to him, unlike his own family, which was effected by alcoholism. My mum lived further away from London, so they stayed at home. She remembers going to bomb shelters and hearing the explosions near by. For me now, it's hard to comprehend how some people can be so psychopathically evil to attack other countries, killing thousands of innocent people, and feel justified doing it. It's still happening today, I don't understand how it is allowed to happen. We are a very broken species.

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    .......one of my mother's worse recollections as a young mother and suffering from the daily bombings in London, were when the "sound" of the German Doodle-Bugs which regularly flew overhead suddenly "cut-out" .b.c. she said one of them would then come crashing down on their home. In fact in May 1940, two "very-newly-married" other family members of theirs were killed in their London bed from one of them. The Records of the names & addresses of Civilians killed during WW2 in London are Online..

  • @JackJackKcajify

    @JackJackKcajify

    9 ай бұрын

    They dont feel justified. They know what they are doing is theft and murder. Conquering another country what else can it be? They are crimes, and those who commit them know they are doing so. But they can protect themselves from facing consequences from their own nation by controlling the government and laws. But guess what? That wont protect you from other nations.

  • @Cromwelldunbar

    @Cromwelldunbar

    9 ай бұрын

    @@elizabethsheffield6609 With deep respect for your comment but not from any doodle-bug were they killed in 1940! Because… The V1s began in the second week of June 1944 and it was either the very first one or the second one came down on a house near to where I lived and no-one knew what they were like at all and in fact they were first described as “terror bombs” the term “doodle-bug” being coined a little later. Some times no air-raid warning was sounded and I recall being seated in an upstairs school class-room one early afternoon and glancing out of a window to see one advancing towards us - and no air-raid warning had been sounded at all. This also happened four years back in September 1940 when walking to school when suddenly - and oh so suddenly - there was a tremendous dog-fight up in the skies above me and no siren had been sounded and there a completely horrifying drama beheld to a seven year old so overcome were the anti-air raid spotters ie there were so many incoming waves of German ‘planes it was beyond our blokes to monitor them all to sound off their siren warnings. In early 1944 and before the doodlebug period which began in June of that year and NOT before that month, there was a renewed period cum effort by the Luftwaffe to start up a “mini blitz” - for they were becoming short of bombers - and we were bombed out of our house and into sleeping nights in the public air raid shelter until spring time: but still a month or so before June ‘44 when the new phenomenal V1 came to bewilder everyone. That lasted the rest of the summer but only to be joined - oh horror above all horror - by the V2 against which there was no hope at all except for our lads in the Army on the other side of the Channel to beat up the coasts through France and the Low Countries to Germany to find their launching sites and destroy them…And that wasn’t easy locating exactly where they were. As to your question of why murdering civilian populations was/is allowed to happen, you have to delve into human nature, the wish to dominate others, the wish for power, motivated by greed, and the desire to oppose others because of pure personal dislike. You might as well express a dislike and bewilderment at shop lifting theft and robbery, perhaps motivated by jealousy, sometimes with nothing more than verbal insult then turning worse. The Hamlet question! Why do people do harm to others? Why do people take things that don’t belong to them and they have no intention of paying for them…Why? Ask me another…! Be not naive nor cynical about human nature!

  • @Cromwelldunbar

    @Cromwelldunbar

    9 ай бұрын

    @Jen.K

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Cromwelldunbar ....I know the dates my ancestors were killed are correct. Probably the recollection about the dates of the doodle bugs were "off". Living through 6 years of war can do that to the minds of those that did.

  • @audreybuchanan5112
    @audreybuchanan51128 ай бұрын

    I was in Esher when a bomb dropped on the kitchen we children was in the cellars but were brought up to the lawn, and l can see that London was alight the sky was red, all l could think of was my Dad was there somewhere , guns on the roof firing at planes going over. The doodle bugs were very noisy and very frightening, l must have been about 9 as lm now 94. I hope it never happens again.

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    audrey. You must have been about 15 when the doodlebugs arrived, because they appeared in June/July 1944.

  • @audreybuchanan5112

    @audreybuchanan5112

    4 ай бұрын

    @@vincekerrigan8300 yes you are right l would have been about 15 when the doodle bugs came followed by the rockets

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr44535 ай бұрын

    it is so important that we hear this

  • @peterreston6478
    @peterreston647810 ай бұрын

    Excellent presentation uncovering many subjects not often covered, for example, the large increase in crime and traffic accidents at night.

  • @nancybingham7298
    @nancybingham72984 ай бұрын

    Good coverage. I was born in 1940s & heard many tales of this time from neighbours & my Uncle Peter in RAF. It was helpful to see actual footage taken.

  • @mjc11a
    @mjc11a7 ай бұрын

    Brilliant presentation! I'm absolutely convinced that regardless which side of the pond they lived on, folks of that generation came from a different cut of the cloth. Thanks for posting and I wish you all a safe and enjoyable holiday season 🙏

  • @claireduncan138
    @claireduncan1384 ай бұрын

    I just love reading all the beautiful comments thank you for sharing ❤

  • @Texaslonestargal
    @Texaslonestargal4 ай бұрын

    God bless the brave British citizens that endured The Blitz and lived to tell their stories.

  • @arthurthomasware5004
    @arthurthomasware500410 ай бұрын

    Yep, I was a London boy. Evacuated out to the countryside and back three times: Devon, London, Northhamtonshire, London, Bury, Lancashire, and finally back to London once Germany was defeated. I was 3 when WW2 started and 9 when it ended. I witnessed the night bombings then, later the Doodle-bugs (V1's) As as someone said in this video "Not a fear in the world." Too young to feel it, I guess. I probably spent 3 years away from my London home, and the rest in London.

  • @boondockingamerica

    @boondockingamerica

    10 ай бұрын

    Not very often you find someone 90 years old posting on you tube.

  • @arthurthomasware5004

    @arthurthomasware5004

    10 ай бұрын

    Not quite 90, Boon. I'm 87.@@boondockingamerica

  • @boondockingamerica

    @boondockingamerica

    10 ай бұрын

    @arthurthomasware5004 man I bet you got some stories to tell. Very few people are left that lived thru the war and those numbers are getting smaller every day. We need people like yourself to tell thier stories so people won't forget and repeat the same mistakes they made in the past.

  • @Jen.K

    @Jen.K

    10 ай бұрын

    @@boondockingamerica My dad, now in his 90's was still on the internet up until about 6 months ago, when his vision got too bad. My mum, also in her 90's still is, and she still drives. They were both children in the UK during the war and have memories of it.

  • @arthurthomasware5004

    @arthurthomasware5004

    10 ай бұрын

    @@boondockingamerica Thanks, Boondock. But I was only a kid: 3 to 9 in WW2. Though I do remember quite a lot about it.

  • @1220b
    @1220b9 ай бұрын

    My great grandfather was a Eastend fireman in the blitz. Went to the truck to get a hose and a bomb went off blowing the truck into the next street. Spent the rest of his life with scars on his head...

  • @rod4095
    @rod409510 ай бұрын

    Wonderful to have first hand testaments documented.

  • @ronahart219
    @ronahart21910 ай бұрын

    Brilliant, thank you. My father was in the Fire Service, based at Bishopsgate, London E 1 during the Blitz. But he didn't speak much about his experiences.

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    ..........my friend's father also served in the Fire Service during the Blitz and unfortunately lost an eye when on Fire Duty one night and the Germans sent down dangerous Incendiary Bombs spraying their deadly contents all over the area.

  • @allanhymer8220
    @allanhymer82205 ай бұрын

    This should be shown in every classroom of every school in the UK and the US to try to instill some reality into today's generation.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    3 ай бұрын

    The corporate globalist "powers that be" don't WANT that to happen. We have to do it ourselves, to teach our kids to ignore the constant BS they see on the "idiot box" and "soshal meeedya".

  • @gaziosman95
    @gaziosman9510 ай бұрын

    👏👏👏 çok güzel harika bir bilgi aşırılıkların insanlığı hangi noktalara götürdüğü açıkça gözler önü e seriyor teşekkür ederim emeğinize sağlık...mutlu sağlıklı ve savaşsız bir yaşam dileğimle.....

  • @davidrussell8834
    @davidrussell88345 ай бұрын

    🇨🇦 My sister and I were evacuated in 1939 to Laindon Essex and returned to Ilford after 2 months. Dad built an Anderson shelter where we slept. It was cold , wet and had spiders. At night we could see flares searchlights and hear the AA guns in Barking park. Dad went in the RAF at 38 and we were again evacuated in 1941 to Derbyshire.We roomed with an old couple and were about to go back when mum got a job and we never returned

  • @gaelaelliott2333

    @gaelaelliott2333

    Ай бұрын

    Did you know Irene and Sheelagh Turner or Mary and Gerald Ells? I ask because my Nan recalled playing with a David in Ilford during the war, and I haven't been able to locate him.

  • @MRB_Rh_Neg
    @MRB_Rh_Neg6 ай бұрын

    My grandmother who also served for the RAF signal corp was dead centre of the blitz , I remember as kids we couldn’t have kazoos or even whistles in her house she suffered badly fr ptsd fr the Blitz , she came to Canada after the war as a war bride and veteran herself, I’ve been to England many years ago but want to go back again now that I’m older to visit some of the worst hit areas. I couldn’t imagine the fear of the British ppl but they could never break their spirits!!! 🇬🇧🌺🇨🇦 I love my British family

  • @MrLemonbaby
    @MrLemonbaby10 ай бұрын

    Wonderfully informative and even handed between courageous acts and some lessor so. But the last sentence... "reminding of the time when the country nearly buckled". But the country didn't buckle nearly or other wise.

  • @aidencox790

    @aidencox790

    10 ай бұрын

    Nearly buckled??? Was that said to generate effect or what? I went through the whole war but further up North - I'm an old 80+ year old Geordie - and we never even came remotely close to "buckling". Then again, Northerners are different to Southerners - and don't think we up north with the coal mines and ship building yards and Vickers Armstrong etcetera had it easy would have gone on forever. But unlike the Southerners we were used to hard times with many people killed in mining and other disasters over many years. Also the South was better looked after by the government - always was and even in 2023 it still is. Maggie Thatcher (Prime Minister1979 to 1990 ) DECIMATED the Northern industries and I as one of many will never forgive her. Buckled? HOGWASH !!!

  • @billotto602
    @billotto60210 ай бұрын

    What an incredible video. Wow, I've read quite a lot about WW 2 but I've never heard or read anything like this. What incredible people with incredible stories. Thank you ! ❤

  • @alexcarter8807
    @alexcarter880710 ай бұрын

    This is a very good documentary. Very detailed.

  • @Joyfulgrace7777
    @Joyfulgrace77778 ай бұрын

    Brilliant work ! I’ve not seen any more concise! I have Foyle’s war but never understood how bad the looting and theft was !

  • @j.dunlop8295
    @j.dunlop82959 ай бұрын

    The Royal Navy captured German U-boat U-110 on May 9, 1941 in the North Atlantic, recovering an Enigma machine, its cipher keys, and code books that allowed … In mid-1942, America's counterpart to Bletchley Park, Building 26 in Dayton, Ohio, cracked the Kriegsmarine's four-rotor Enigma system.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    8 ай бұрын

    No it didn't. The UK broke the "shark" network.

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt9 ай бұрын

    The English Channel stopped them, just as it stopped Napoleon. The bombing just made the Brits tougher. They would never surrender.

  • @adventussaxonum448

    @adventussaxonum448

    5 ай бұрын

    Never stopped us going the other way.

  • @michelleduplooymalherbe2837
    @michelleduplooymalherbe283710 ай бұрын

    VERY IMFORMATIVE AND INTERESTING, WOW THOSE PEOPLE HAD BACKBONE, WHAT POTRIOTISM!! I HONESTLY THINK IF THAT HAD TO HAPPEND TODAY THE RESLUTS MIGHT NOT BE THE SAME - WE JUST HAVE NOT GOT THE SAME SPIRIT

  • @MrScaryLemonHead
    @MrScaryLemonHead5 ай бұрын

    When I see and hear these stories… I can only think about “When the wind blows”.

  • @terrym3837
    @terrym383710 ай бұрын

    My mum endured the blitz three times they were bombed out when I asked her what did you do all she said was find somewhere else to live

  • @kieramaccourt8717

    @kieramaccourt8717

    5 ай бұрын

    That was what my Nan said too. Her and my grandfather spent the night in a shelter (in London) out the next morning to be married before he went off to the Army.

  • @johnryan2193
    @johnryan21939 ай бұрын

    How crazy is that.looting the dead and dying

  • @vm6824

    @vm6824

    9 ай бұрын

    Humans at their best!

  • @sueengle6242
    @sueengle624210 ай бұрын

    FFS Sake: It wasn't just London that was devastated The Luftwaffe heavily bombed Liverpool and Manchester. Targeting the ship yards, ports and manufacturing areas. And then dropped the surplus bombs over Hull on the way back over. Hull was devastated. More than 97pc of homes and buildings were damaged/destroyed by the dumping of bombs on the way back over the channel

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    So what?

  • @mrkittengaming7735
    @mrkittengaming773510 ай бұрын

    My Granny’s neighbour home was destroyed by a bomb which damaged their house she was then shipped by herself at 13 to Canada and her parents passed away in England

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan404710 ай бұрын

    Interesting and informative. Excellent photography job enabling viewers to better understand what/whom the orator was describing. Special thanks to the veteran soldiers/civilians sharing personal information/bombing experiences making this documentary more authentic and possible. The civil defense/bobbies/other organizations. Did an exceedingly professional job preparing for the diabolical on slaught of the diabolical 😈 Luftwaffe bombings. Victory gardens/recycling scrap drives. Sand bagging crews & other essential groups. Made quite a difference between having & not having essential war time items.

  • @RT-fe1mu
    @RT-fe1mu9 ай бұрын

    I have the highest respect for the English people they were very tough people!

  • @conveyor2

    @conveyor2

    7 ай бұрын

    Key is the "were".

  • @AnthonyRooney-be2tx
    @AnthonyRooney-be2tx8 ай бұрын

    Will always have the memory's as a small boy who used to wander wasn't Controlled seeing doodlbug flying over clapham common taking shelter when Siren sounded also in Kent seeing dog fights overhead parachutes in the sky and Dads army running with fixed Bayonets near Penshurst troop trains crossing Wandsworth Rd waving to soldiers heading to war many never to return Thanks to all who served

  • @MrMAC8964
    @MrMAC896410 ай бұрын

    My mom got sick of the wet cold bombshelter my Grandfather built in Eastbourne and refused to die in it , so stayed in her bed . She and her friends (like 12 yrs old ) were strafed bye a BF109 while swimming in a river as well. Nuts.

  • @janebrown1706

    @janebrown1706

    7 күн бұрын

    Gèe the strafing is very nasty! In the mid 70s my UK cousin fell in love with a German lad however he found his father had been a nazi in the war and refused to marry her.

  • @MrMAC8964

    @MrMAC8964

    7 күн бұрын

    @@janebrown1706 was it a "he" or a "her" ? hard to make heads or tails on that one.

  • @rodneymaennling5963
    @rodneymaennling59634 ай бұрын

    An impressive video, not dramatized or overstated. I was born in 1934 and lived in Northwest London and evacuated to East Anglia for a short time when the V1 flying bombs commenced. I'm turning 90 this year and the eldest of three siblings. Our parents were very considerate, yet kept us up to date on the troubles; we were always included for the important BBC radio broadcasts. We lived just outside of the main blitz targets in Kenton, but rather close to Northolt and the Hendon RAF aerodromes.. We were told never to pick up from the streets anything that looked odd. One example looked like a cigarette lighter I found but which actually a shell casing but which could have blown us to bits. As boys, we did accumulate and swap all kinds of stuff, such as shrapnel, small toys, military buttons, and jewellery. I did find an aircraft cockpit instrument, and I was given by an uncle German army helmet and badges. All my uncles and aunts served. My father enlisted, but was honourably discharged due to several medical issues, but then became a radar researcher at GEC Research Labs close to home. This long note I suppose, reflects the pride of my heritage. There's something about island life which reflects the nature of the British mentality that "one doesn't mess about with my patch". Rodney British Columbia Canada

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    rodney. I am a bit older than you, and can relate to all you said. Don't talk about the 'pride of your heritage' in Britain today - you will be vilified. Most of this modern generation have no respect for us, in fact they denigrate us all the time, and actually seem to hate us. They are contemptible. I weep for what England has become.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your memories with us all Rodney. Always good to see other people proud if their heritage. Sincerest regards to yours and my own parents generation. Best wishes to you.

  • @oldman1734
    @oldman17342 ай бұрын

    I remember the war. For me, being a small child, the worst thing about going down shelters while at school was having to form two lines and hold hands with a GIRL. But feelings can change!!

  • @AndyJarman
    @AndyJarman9 ай бұрын

    I just watched "Things to come" a 1936 film dramatization of the book by H G Wells, it's here on You Tube for free. My mother (who was at school in London during the Blitz) told me that film is what they expected to happen. It was the end of the world, NOBODY thought a bombing raid by the Luftwaffe was survivable, at least in the long term.

  • @Lynda-oo7ey
    @Lynda-oo7ey5 ай бұрын

    What a brave people,the Brits are!😁😀

  • @kez8355
    @kez835510 ай бұрын

    Love watching things like this, thankyou

  • @johnfleming446
    @johnfleming4465 ай бұрын

    I was,a portsmouth boy born 1933. Evacuation 3 times.saw much of😮 the bombing.no school.day and night diving into air raid shelters

  • @glennwing4214
    @glennwing42144 ай бұрын

    I met a man once who had been in London, as a student, during the Blitz. When asked about what his experience had been, he answered that it all seemed fairly normal. And what else could he have answered? Everything we go through seems normal when we're young. I can't even begin to imagine what it must have been like... Any time you think life is requiring too much grit, just think about the British in these years. It will put things into perspective.

  • @TrilbyJeeves
    @TrilbyJeeves3 ай бұрын

    This was so interesting to watch. It continues to amaze me what humans can invent and make. My mother who is 90 with dementia was a London kid who was evacuated to Newquay, Cornwall. I wish I could meet someone who has this memory or has relatives with this memory. My GrandDad worked on the Barrage Balloons, and my Grandmother drove an ambulance. They divorced during the war! My Mum didn't talk a lot about her life during wartime, but I do have some of her memories. She does remember her mother and Grandma fighting about her being evacuated. Does anyone here have any information on the kids who went to Cornwall? Thank you...

  • @emilygooner9697
    @emilygooner96978 ай бұрын

    Amazing doc thank you

  • @philomenamagill700
    @philomenamagill7004 ай бұрын

    Great documentary

  • @DataWaveTaGo
    @DataWaveTaGo9 ай бұрын

    At 39:57 - "...coupled to his eating carrots." This was misdirection promoted by the RAF. RAF night fighters were equipt with RED BACKLIGHTING for the cockpit instruments, as the red light after-image quickly faded away, and in any case, was of minimal intensity when the pilot took his final instrument check then looked ahead in the night sky.

  • @georgielancaster1356

    @georgielancaster1356

    9 ай бұрын

    England had a glut of carrots that year, and it was done to get little boys to feel they were eating like their heroes. I hadn't seen Cats-eyes look so old! Lovely to see him as old chap.

  • @zcam1969
    @zcam19697 ай бұрын

    This Video is the real deal , there is a lot of crap on the internet . but this is real .!

  • @jonny7491
    @jonny74915 ай бұрын

    My Mother and Aunt was evacuated to a farm in Gloucestershire right next to a mock airdrome, and given the way they carpet bombed, my grandmother brought them back home and said we might as well go all together.

  • @AndyJarman
    @AndyJarman9 ай бұрын

    The thumbnail to this video! I often see rats and mice scurrying down on the tracks - people must have been desperate to sleep there!

  • @stephfoxwell4620
    @stephfoxwell4620Ай бұрын

    My mother in law was orphaned in the third biggest raid if the Blitz. 21 March 1941, Welling. House collapsed killing my wife's grandparents and leaving the kids buried at the back of the building.

  • @KNemo1999
    @KNemo19995 ай бұрын

    I was evacuated at age 9 and spent most of the war in a wardrobe. Good times

  • @Jimmiburn
    @Jimmiburn4 ай бұрын

    Very interesting piece of history excellent film.

  • @montygemma
    @montygemma10 ай бұрын

    One of the funniest stories I heard from the war is of this man who lived in Poole. Because the town was a port and on the coast he feared bombing raids so he and his family moved to his brothers in London. East London.

  • @elizabethsheffield6609

    @elizabethsheffield6609

    9 ай бұрын

    ......back to the middle of the London Docks which were mercilessly bombed during the Blitz.

  • @christopherbutler7588
    @christopherbutler758810 ай бұрын

    Thanks

  • @neilyadav9448
    @neilyadav94484 ай бұрын

    Best Documentary

  • @sylviaball3874
    @sylviaball38745 ай бұрын

    I was born in the blitz. South London. Used to sleep down Elephant and Castle underground. We were then evacuated to Devon for over 6 years before returning to London. Look how we have ended up. Pensioners now are nobody s. Total disgrace. We sit in A & E FOR 12 HOURS for a service we paid into for up to 50 years. Not valued at all.😢

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    sylvia. Bang on - I weep for what England has become.

  • @sylviaball3874

    @sylviaball3874

    4 ай бұрын

    I lived it but still can't believe it. God bless you sunshine ❤❤

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    3 ай бұрын

    @@sylviaball3874 God bless you as well Sylvia. I do hope you're keeping well. It is indeed a tragedy what the most greedy and ambitious in our country have done to it all. Look after yourself darling. x

  • @richards1929
    @richards192910 ай бұрын

    That fella is a bit keen... Cracking program

  • @j.dunlop8295
    @j.dunlop82959 ай бұрын

    Ukrainians at the same horrible terrorist threats as these good people! 🇺🇦🚀🙏

  • @conveyor2

    @conveyor2

    7 ай бұрын

    Including the oh so noble Azov Battalion with its neo nazi emblems?

  • @namcat53
    @namcat535 ай бұрын

    Good documentary, but the audio is flawed with inconsistent volume levels.

  • @johnhewett9483
    @johnhewett948310 ай бұрын

    brilliant video wellworth watching all the way through

  • @marydamico3734
    @marydamico373410 ай бұрын

    I was born in the may blitz in Liverpool hospital was bombed

  • @georgielancaster1356

    @georgielancaster1356

    9 ай бұрын

    I think Miriam Margolyes was, too.

  • @carolcouch3820

    @carolcouch3820

    5 ай бұрын

    I was born in StHeloer hospital 21st March 1944 and was rescued at about 11 months of age along with my mother. It was done thanks to my grandad in Birmingham, Alabama as my father was in US Army air core stationed just south of London where he met and married my mom. I still remember being terrified of police sirens and fire engines until around age 5 years.

  • @MS-sb9ov
    @MS-sb9ov10 ай бұрын

    The movie Finest Hour was pretty good except the diversity segment on the tube just felt too contrived and false. It let the whole thing down. Look at this film l and you’ll see the reality of diversity. Aka zero.

  • @vincekerrigan8300

    @vincekerrigan8300

    4 ай бұрын

    MS. Ruined the film for me - bloody nonsense. I started work in 1948, travelled by tube every day, and didn't see a single black person until the early sixties.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan404710 ай бұрын

    Those V-2 rockets🚀🚀would have been put to much better devastating use. Aimed towards the advancing Russian military forces. A no brainer!!!

  • @marthae9338

    @marthae9338

    10 ай бұрын

    No it would not; not at that stage of the war. The advance of the Red Army was inexorable and the V-1's and V-2's, even if they could reach that far at that point would have likely fallen on more of the retreating Germans.

  • @TommyTombs
    @TommyTombs10 ай бұрын

    The good old days

  • @Cromwelldunbar

    @Cromwelldunbar

    10 ай бұрын

    Aye, but grim recollections. I lived through it. I recall with supreme pride the Generation of our Elders - they were stupendous!

  • @pixie706
    @pixie7069 ай бұрын

    And people moan about hardship now . making do is nothing new. .at least UK isn't being bombed

  • @catbevis1644
    @catbevis16445 ай бұрын

    1:04:06 The aerial photo shown is actually MacKenzie Road Islington, which was struck by a V2 a few months later on Boxing Day 1944. This photo was taken the following April, after a lot of the immediately dangerous rubble had been cleared.

  • @justadildeau
    @justadildeau10 ай бұрын

    Imagine Britain trying this feat with it's contemporary diversity. Britain isn't capable of anything like this today.

  • @tom79013

    @tom79013

    10 ай бұрын

    British/Europeans in general having nothing to fight for. Everything that made our countries special has been destroyed. Fight? For what? Just to see it all be given away to those that don't deserve it. No thanks

  • @wmorris189

    @wmorris189

    10 ай бұрын

    Jesus mate stop with the war nostalgia, it was a horrible time for everybody which we will hopefully never have the deal with again and who did the soldiers vote in? Socialism and The NHS . And yes let’s not forget one of the main purposes of the EU to stop 1000s of years of incredibly destructive and harmful wars, but hey Vera Lynn?

  • @justadildeau

    @justadildeau

    10 ай бұрын

    @@wmorris189 show me a single country where diversity is a strength. Otherwise clap your trap shut.

  • @marthae9338

    @marthae9338

    10 ай бұрын

    What a stupid statement. Diversity has nothing to do with it. Ridiculous to look at the Second World War with 21st century attitudes.

  • @warrenlewis3977

    @warrenlewis3977

    10 ай бұрын

    What does diversity have to do with surviving the Blitz?? Why do you creeps always have to involve your bigotry when the program has NOTHING to do with race?? Help me understand..

  • @djb8088
    @djb808810 ай бұрын

    53:08 imagine being blown off the commode like her grandfather sad

  • @CJ-ft9yo
    @CJ-ft9yoАй бұрын

    I love the lady saying that the bombs were a hassle in nightclubs If anything… watched the Edge of love and it showed this happen, dancing just carried on

  • @rezzer7918
    @rezzer791810 ай бұрын

    5-STAR ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @phillgreenland2390
    @phillgreenland239010 ай бұрын

    What bus did this random guy staring right into the camera at 2:40 get off of?

  • @AndyJarman
    @AndyJarman9 ай бұрын

    I hadn't realised that right up to four weeks before war's end the Nazis were launching thousands of V2s.

  • @ronahart219

    @ronahart219

    9 ай бұрын

    The rockets were largely assembled by slave labour - people from countries conquered by the Germans. Conditions were incredibly hard and dangerous and tens of thousands of the slave workers perished.

  • @TheLifeEvents
    @TheLifeEvents3 ай бұрын

    33:22 Such an interesting lady, could listen to her all day. xx

  • @jazz4asahel
    @jazz4asahel9 ай бұрын

    10:40 What a wonderful woman.

  • @AndyJarman
    @AndyJarman9 ай бұрын

    I wonder how much of the diet in London was supplemented with pigeons? The City is overrun with them today!

  • @phubblewubbphubblewubb
    @phubblewubbphubblewubb5 ай бұрын

    I can't see the population of today's London pulling together, they'll be too busy on their knees asking Allan to save them.

  • @janaleland9038
    @janaleland90388 ай бұрын

    What were the air raid wardens swinging around as they walked the debris? Looks like the noise makers that people use during New Year's Eve parties.

  • @davethatcher4954

    @davethatcher4954

    5 ай бұрын

    It was a wooden device, that when swung around made a loud clacking noise. People used to take them to football matches after the war, and used them in support for their teams. You don't see them anymore.

  • @janebrown1706
    @janebrown17067 күн бұрын

    1978 I came to the UK, land of my ancestors. Shared with a pack of colonials who all agreed the poms had had nothing, which was true compared to what we came from. It wasn't til Foyles War that I started to understand. Great aunt in Manchester said 1939 phony war was nerve wracking and a bugger. Great grandpa was an air warden who died of a heart attack on the job - too much stress I suppose.

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