Friday, November 17, 2017

London - 30s, WW2

.London during WW-II in color > .Life In London During The Blitz | Cities At War: London | Timeline > .
Why the V1 Flying Bomb couldn't turn the tide of WW2 - IWM > .

Bomb damage, close up filming of the release of barrage balloons, anti-aircraft gun positions, traffic at Trafalgar Square, Piccadilly Circus, military parades in front of Buckingham Palace, beautiful scenes of the Thames during daytime and at dusk, Waterloo Station, etc.

00:00 South side of Westminster Bridge looking over to the Houses of Parliament. Probably blitz-damaged St Thomas's Hospital on the left.
00:37 Buckingham Palace with "Guards" in Khaki uniform. On Sunday 18th June 1944, a German V1 flying bomb fell on the Guards' Chapel in Wellington Barracks on Birdcage Walk, just a few hundred yards from the Palace, during Morning Service. 121 soldiers and civilians, including the presiding Chaplain, were killed, 141 were seriously injured.
00:58 The "Upper" Pool of London from London Bridge, river Thames.
01:16 Cigar shop near Piccadilly Circus, corner of Coventry Street and Great Windmill Street
02:16 Trafalgar Square. All the art treasures form the National Gallery at the top of the Square had been removed to secure storage sites in mines and caves at the outbreak of War.
03:12 Back to the "Upper Pool".
04:09 "Blitz" bomb damage in the City of London. Many of these "bomb sites" were still there, overgrown with vegetation and weeds in the early and mid 1950's.
04:20 Holborn with St Andrews church.
04:48 Back to the Piccadilly Circus cigar shop, and you can see the covered-over statue of "Eros" far left, to protect it from war damage. Looking towards Regent Street.
06:08 Looking across the River Thames from the Embankment to the "Shot Tower" on the left and the "Lion Brewery" on the right, on Waterloo''s South Bank. The brewery, together with a lot of bomb damaged slum housing, would be swept away to make room for the 1951 "Festival of Britain" site, but the Red Lion statue now stands at the bottom of the entrance to Waterloo main-line railway station in York Road.
06:25 Great Windmill Street, near the famous Windmill Theatre
06:50 More "Blitz" damage near Christ Church Greyfriars (still in ruins today)
07:15 "Blitz" damage in the City near Tower Hill.
07:40 St. Paul's Cathedral: Christopher Wren's masterpiece stands almost undamaged among the "blitzed" buildings.
08:04 More "Blitz" damage near (Location?)
08:45 A barrage balloon Goes Up in Westminster Gardens near the Houses of Parliament. The Balloon fabric" was a hard-wearing material with many uses in much demand in "austerity Britain" after the War!
09:36 Women's Royal Army Corps personnel being instructed at an Anti- Aircraft battery in Hyde Park.
10:10 Might not be a gun, but a range-finder used to determine the altitude of a hostile aircraft. 11:10 Piccadilly Circus. Eros is "unclothed" and the motor vehicles and dress look pre-War. This footage is from the 1930´s. Apologies for overlooking this.
11:29 Trafalgar Square.
12:04 Hyde Park Corner, maybe pre-War. The railings haven't been taken away to "build Spitfires", and Speakers' Corner is thriving, which was not allowed during the War.
12:30 Waterloo Station. A "king Arthur" Class locomotive brings in an express from Bournemouth or the South West of England. 1930s footage.
13:33 A "Mogul" brings in another train - note the porters hurrying towards the First-Class coaches! Probably pre/war. Rail travel was restricted during the War. "Is your journey really necessary?" and one would expect to see many more people in uniform, Royal Naval personnel travelling to and from "Pompey" and Devonport, as well as "brown jobs", among the passengers.
Certainly the Southern Railway wouldn't be advertising "Summer Fares" at the ticket barrier,
15:53 A reprise of "Blitz" damage near Holborn, St.Andrews Church (at a different time of day)
15:58 Policemen near Philip Lane and Aldermanbury Avenue (now "Route-11")
16:04 Another barrage balloon goes up, near the Tower and Tower Bridge (location?)
16:17 Back to Piccadilly Circus, looking towards Shaftesbury Avenue
16:30 VE Day celebrations, this is definitely 8th May 1945.

Nearly all London's famous hotspots come into view like Trafalgar Square, Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament with the tower that houses the Big Ben bell, County Hall (Currently home to the London Aquarium), the Egyption Obelisk on the Embankment, London bridge with many Omnibusses, Tower Bridge and the Tower where Henry the 8th had two of his wives beheaded, Bank with the Royal Exchange, Sir Christopher Wren´s architectural masterpiece, Saint Pauls Cathedral, Fleet street with its many news paper publishers, Temple Bar Gate, Horse Guards at Whitehall and at Hide Park Corner, The Cenotaph, London´s friendly ´Bobby´s´, Women shelling Peas in Covent Garden market, Street Hawkers, The famous London Flower sellers, all dressed with the same type of hat and a nice coat, at Piccadilly Circus

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