Saturday, November 17, 2018

London docklands - Blitz

Docklands keeps working despite the rising death toll from Hitler's Blitz
http://www.londonsriver.com/world-war-ii.html

London and the River Thames were the prime targets for the intensive bombing campaign in World War II – the Blitz. There were two objectives – disrupting trade through the country’s largest port, and breaking Britain’s spirit. But the Germans were proved wrong on both points.

Throughout the summer of 1940 the Luftwaffe (German Air Force) was targeting the RAF – both in the skies and at its bases across the Southeast. The Germans needed air superiority before they could mount their planned invasion of England. This was the Battle of Britain – and despite heavy losses of men and aircraft, the RAF gradually gained the upper hand, forcing the Germans to change tactics.

The raids on London began in earnest in September 1940. On “Black Saturday” a force of 348 bombers, with an even larger fighter escort, arrived over East London and headed up river.

Their targets were industry and infrastructure: Woolwich Arsenal, Beckton gas works and the Royal Docks, then industry, wharves and warehouses all the way from Silvertown to Wapping. Three hours later a second wave arrived – guided to target by the bright orange glow from hundreds of burning buildings.

As dawn broke, the scale of the destruction was revealed: 450 Londoners had been killed and 1,500 badly injured. Three main railway stations were out of action and 1,000 fires were still burning, all the way up the river from Deptford to Putney.

They included 200 acres of timber ponds and stores in the Surrey Commercial Docks, destroying one third of London’s stocks of timber – which was badly needed for building repairs in the coming months.

That was just the start. Reports back from aircrew and reconnaissance photos on this and the next few raids convinced the Luftwaffe high command that they were striking a mortal blow at the nation’s industrial and transport base – not least threatening food supplies. They were convinced that if they kept it up, they would bring Britain to its knees.

So began the Blitz. The bombers struck for 75 nights – and sometimes by day as well – with the riverside communities from Woolwich to Lambeth bearing the brunt of the onslaught.

Some streets had sturdy, well-constructed public air raid shelters; in others people had to rely on quickly-built Anderson shelters made from a couple of sheets of corrugated iron with earth piled on top.

Salvage crews were on standby in the docks and on the riverside; even while the fires were still burning they began clearing debris so that the work of the port could continue.

At this stage, anti-aircraft gunnery was a very basic form of defence, more useful at boosting civilian morale than actually damaging enemy aircraft.

Another layer of defence was provided by barrage balloons which were flown over the docks and some big factories.

Only a few of the RAF’s nightfighter squadrons had the latest Beaufighter aircraft equipped with radar – some were still flying Blenheims which were far slower and had to rely on their ground controllers for directions.

On the river, air defence precautions included establishing the River Emergency Service. More than a dozen pre-war pleasure steamers were converted to first aid and ambulance boats, each manned by a doctor, one or two nurses and three or four VADs, young women volunteers with basic first aid and nursing training. They were moored at various points along the river including Silvertown Wharf, Wapping and Cherry Garden.

Meanwhile it was not exactly business as usual for the docks and wharves as traffic was reduced to half its pre-war levels. But more freight was carried by tugs and lighters (barges) since – unlike the roads – the river was never blocked by bomb damage.

1,436 people were killed and 1,800 seriously injured in London on the night of 10-11 May 1941. The German air force dropped 711 tons of high explosive and 86,173 incendiary bombs.

Full text of "The City That Would Not Die The Bombing Of London May 10 11 1941"
https://archive.org/stream/citythatwouldnot010963mbp/citythatwouldnot010963mbp_djvu.txt
https://archive.org/stream/citythatwouldnot010963mbp#page/n13/mode/2up

Kingston on Thames DAY THE THAMES DISAPPEARED
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/25/a4615625.shtml .

Battle of Britain and Artie Holmes' Hurricane - HiGu > .   

London Hospital, St Thomas Hospital - Blitz

St. Thomas's Hospital Bombed (1940) > .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHaZOezlAPg .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZujHV5gmtPY .
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUZqY4c-bac .

Blitz damage in London > 

London Hospital
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kG_OvL9FZVQ .

Bart's 1931
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMyYQy7w8ps .
Bart's '80s?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKM9EeuvZ0s .

London Blitz - West End


Even though the largest percentage of German bombs dropped on London fell on the East End, the City of London and the docks, the capital’s West End and its suburbs also suffered, extensively. This was illustrated by the experience of the City of Westminster, a London borough amalgamated in 1965 with its neighbour, St Marylebone, but in 1940 a discrete municipal entity. Over 1,100 City of Westminster residents were killed during the London Blitz and 2,500 others seriously injured. The borough witnessed its first (minor) bomb incident when incendiaries fell on Belgravia on 30 August 1940

Many iconic buildings in City of Westminster and St Marylebone were badly damaged during the first three and a half months of the Blitz (September to December 1940). These included: Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament, Whitehall, The National Gallery, BBC Broadcasting House (Portland Place W1), Marble Arch, Green Park, Sloane Square and Trafalgar Square Underground Stations. Also struck were Leicester Square, Regent Street, Victoria Street, Petty France, Dolphin Square SW1, Pimlico, Millbank, Savile Row W1, Madame Tussauds, Baker Street, (Marylebone), five department stores on Oxford Street (John Lewis, Selfridges, Peter Robinson, Bourne and Hollingsworth and DH Evans), Soho and Piccadilly.

In daylight and night raids during 1940-1941, an average of 28 high explosive bombs fell per 100 acres in Westminster. Westminster districts - particularly Pimlico, Soho and Millbank - were struck by incendiary and high explosive bombs, parachute mines ('land mines' in contemporary parlance) and V1 flying bombs (from June 1944). V2 Long Range Rockets also hit Westminster and St Marylebone during September 1944 to March 1945.


The Blitz | Bomb Incidents | West End at War
westendatwar.org.u


Blitz damage in London > 

Color footage .
15 Photos .

London - Blitz Through Time


The Blitz : London's Longest Night 1/2 > .
41-5 - Blitz crescendo - Liverpool, Belfast, Nottingham, Hull, London - WW2 > .
Blitz - tb >> .


□ Piccadilly Circus just before the August '39 trial blackout □

https://mashable.com/2014/10/13/to-hide-from-wwii-bombs-london-goes-dark/#4c_muE6I1Zqr .

https://mashable.com/2016/06/22/london-dufaycolor/?utm_cid=lf-toc#KABr3TiwCGqN .

London
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/11/40-12-30-second-great-fire-of-london.html
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/10/london-balham-street-bus.html
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/11/london-balham-tube-station.html
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/11/london-st-thomas-hospital-blitz.html
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/11/london-blitz-west-end.html

   London docklands - Blitz   
https://wwdeux.blogspot.com/2018/11/london-docklands-blitz.html
   41-2-17 St Pancras
In the midst of the blitz, British Movietone covered the story of a large van that was made into a mobile library for the devastated areas of St. Pancras. A large van has been made into a mobile library for the devasted areas of St. Pancras. The doors are opened and the borrowers file in. Small boys favour war books and discuss their choices afterwards. The new mobile library is touring badly blitzed areas.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-ikm_3_ewI
   Walthamstow Bomb Census Map dating from 18 – 19 April 1944.
By 1944 Luftwaffe raids on England were becoming less frequent, but this map, dating from April 1944, shows bombs dropped during a single raid in the early hours of April 18/19 1944 over Leyton and Walthamstow in London’s East End.
 ---
Between 1940 and 1941, both Houses of Parliament were convened at Church House in Westminster due to a fear that the Chambers might be bombed by the German Airforce while the Houses were sitting. The Palace was damaged by air raids on fourteen different occasions during the war.

On 26 September 1940, a bomb which fell into Old Palace Yard caused severe damage to the south wall of St Stephen's Porch and the masonry of the west front. The statue of Richard the Lionheart was even lifted bodily from the pedestal, but sustained only minor damage in the form of a bent sword.

On 8 December 1940, a bomb demolished the south and east sides of the Cloisters of St Stephen's and did considerable damage to the other two sides.

Commons Chamber destroyed

The incendiary bombs which fell on the nights of 10 and 11 May 1941 caused the greatest damage to the Palace. The Commons Chamber was hit by bombs and the roof of Westminster Hall was set on fire. The fire service said that it would be impossible to save both, so it was decided to concentrate on saving the Hall.

The Commons Chamber was entirely destroyed by the fire which spread to the Members' Lobby and caused the ceiling to collapse. By the following morning, all that was left of the Chamber was a smoking shell.

A small bomb struck the Clock Tower and broke all the glass on its south face, but the clock and bells were undamaged and the chimes could be broadcast as usual.

The House of Lords was struck by a bomb which passed through the floor of the Chamber without exploding.

Temporary accommodation for the Houses

As the Commons Chamber was totally destroyed and the Lords Chamber was damaged, both Houses moved to the Church House annexe and sat there from 13 May.

From late June 1941 until October 1950, the Commons met in the Lords Chamber, while the Lords met in the Robing Room (a fact which was kept secret during the war). To reach the temporary Commons Chamber in the Lords, the Speaker's Procession had to pass through the Central Lobby. This proved such a popular feature that the practice was retained after the Commons moved back to its new Chamber in 1950.

   Wapping & Bermondsey
Black - total destruction
Purple – damage beyond repair
Red – seriously damaged, doubtful if repairable
Orange - seriously damaged, reparable at cost
Gold – general blast damage, not structural
Yellow – blast damage, minor in nature
Green – clearance areas

http://www.bombsight.org/explore/greater-london/tower-hamlets/st-katherines-and-wapping/
http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2016/05/18/bomb-damage-maps-reveal-londons-world-war-ii-devastation/

http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/files/2016/05/114-115_LCC_AR_TP_40_077_c-1920x1369.jpg

https://twitter.com/LBTHArchives .

sī vīs pācem, parā bellum

igitur quī dēsīderat pācem praeparet bellum    therefore, he who desires peace, let him prepare for war sī vīs pācem, parā bellum if you wan...