A way to gauge what was happening at any stage in the war is to refer
to contemporary records. Being the resourceful young chap that he is
web-man 'the boy genius' came up with an issue of the Daily Mail
dated 28th December 1943 (a real paper and print edition),
four pages in its entirety, which makes interesting reading. F/Sgt
Jim Ives would have had the chance to read these same pages in the
Sgt's Mess at RAF Waltham.
The main headline
covered the sinking of the German Battleship 'Scharnhorst' two days
previously:
'SCHARNHORST FELL
INTO TRAP – Victim of Need for Hitler's Victory.
Convoy Safe: Only 2
Ships Damaged'.
Other reports included:
'Russians Drive 20
Miles in a Day – Southward Thrust in the”Bulge” -
Two more great
successes were reported from the Eastern Front by Moscow to-night.
They are:-
A 20-mile advance on
the south of the Kiev “Bulge” which has now widened the
“break-through front” by more than 60 miles, and
the cutting of the
Vitebsk-Polotsk railway, the fortress's last direct escape route to
the west.'
'Tedder Chosen as
Our Invasion Chief Number 2 -
General Eisenhower's
deputy in the Supreme Command for the Second Front is to be Air Chief
Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, Chief of the Mediterranean Air Command, it
is announced today.'
Tedder was attributed
with having invented the tactic of 'carpet bombing' – nothing to do
with Harris's city bombing campaign but explained in the piece as a
feature of RAF co-operation with the Army in the Mediterranean and
North Africa - 'a closely patterned carpet of bombs at points in the
front line which needed softening'.
'Victory in 1944 –
Eisenhower -
Allied HQ, North
Africa, Monday.
General Eisenhower,
newly appointed Supreme Commander for the “Second Front” told
correspondents here today “The only thing needed for us to win the
European War in 1944 is for every man and woman from the front line
to the remotest hamlet of our two countries to do his and her full
duty.”
'Night RAF Out
Again, Holiday Lull Ends.'
'Churchill to speak
on New Chiefs -
The Prime Minister will
give his views on the pattern of the newly-created Western Invasion
Command under General Eisenhower in the near future, most probably in
a broadcast to the nation or by a speech in Parliament.'
Just a few of the items
covered. Interesting and slightly surprising that six months before
the event the national press was broadcasting the seeds of the
invasion. But this is the nature of propaganda - good for morale at
home and bound to reach German eyes and ears too, taunting the enemy
that the pride of the German Navy had been sunk, the Russians were
now making progress in the East, the Second Front was coming and the
Allies would win the War, and that the bombing campaign against the
German capital was continuing and effective, given significant
credence by publishing a photograph.
The bombing of Berlin
warrants a mention on three of the four pages of the edition – in addition to the 'Night RAF' piece the
most recent raid on 23rd/24th December was being
cited as the most effective attack to date.
But - Night RAF Out Again? An honest
mistake I'm sure, but I can find no record of a major RAF bombing
operation after Christmas until the Berlin raid on the night of 29th
December 1943. Nothing at all until the night of 28th/29th
(tonight) when according to 'The Bomber Command War Diaries' 10
Mosquitoes went to Duisburg, 9 to Dusseldorf, 1 to Cologne and with 11
other sorties from OTUs.
Inaccuracy? Fabrication?
Or just a subtle bit of propaganda?
Meanwhile away from the
war – entertainments were being advertised - 'all this week in N
and E London' “Crazy isn't the word for it – Hi Diddle Diddle”
(United Artists) with Adolphe Menjou, Martha Scott and Pola Negri.
And, at the Regal
Marble Arch and London Pavilion – now - Sam Goldwyn's 'North Star',
starring Anne Baxter, Dana Andrews, Walter Huston, Walter Brennan and
Erich Von Stroheim in its 3rd record breaking week of the
greatest picture of these years! - “A sincere gesture to
scorched Russia as 'Mrs Miniver' was to blitzed Britain “.
At the Apollo Theatre
(telephone Ger 2663) Terrence Rattigan's play 'Flare Path' was in its
second year and elsewhere the pantomime season was in full swing
'with Miss Glynis Johns as a graceful, impish Peter Pan (though
slightly undertoned)' at the Cambridge Theatre. At His Majesty's
Theatre Miss Evelyn Laye was a 'most charming Prince Charming', Miss
Carol Lynne 'the prettiest of Cinderellas, the cast included four
real Shetland ponies, 'that first rate ballet dancer Miss Natasha
Sokolova' as the good fairy and 'Miss Tessie O'Shea, working with
robust energy and a North Country accent'.
All good for morale.
Mention of Terrence
Rattigan and 'Flare Path' of course, brings me neatly back to the
RAF Film theme as his play apparently formed the basis for the
excellent, and still my favourite, film of that era 'The Way to the
Stars' (1945).
Back then is when the Daily Mail printed articles worth reading, The raid article I feel was written to show morale or maybe a hint of propaganda, and it goes to show even back in the 40s the papers would say anything just to get sales.
ReplyDeleteI wonder how many stories where printed in the rag at the time that where how we say ' Not Factual'.
You only have to listen to comedy of that time "ITMA", short for "It's That Man Again", was a wartime comedy that began in 1939, starring stage comedian Tommy Handley. Its name from newspaper headlines of the time, in which the phrase "It's That Man Again" was frequently used as an ironic reference to Hitler. Audio link here https://archive.org/details/OldTimeRadio-1940s (RAF Edition)
Giving morale a bit of a nudge at home was all part of the war effort. Thanks for the audio link Brian- I'll have a listen.
DeleteCould it have been an American bombing raid?
ReplyDeleteI do not think it was unheard of back then (and probably even now) that the Americans would authorise 'secret' missions to get the job done.
Lets face it, if you believed everything thing you watched and read these days, the Yanks won the war single handed, and if it wasn't for their forces us 'quaint' Brits would all be talking German!!
DeleteA top secret USAAF night mission en masse – sorry, but as Captain Mainwaring would say 'I think you're entering the realms of fantasy there Jones'. Sounds like a rival film idea to me – the weather was too bad for even the RAF to fly but the USAAF did so without telling anyone! Don't think so.
The Eighth Air Force was committed to daylight bombing - a dogmatic stance which cost them many aircrew casualties because formations could not adequately self defend. Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Harris had called for the USAAF to come in on the 'Battle of Berlin', but they didn't until March 1944.
USAAF crews were not trained or equipped to operate in darkness despite some small-scale participation in RAF night operations in the autumn of 1943. The first USAAF bombers to bomb Berlin on March 4th 1944 were a force of 29 B-17s, which had not complied with a recall to abort the mission.
Fortunately some of the intended escort fighters were allowed to proceed and appeared in the defence of the bombers as they were being attacked by a small force of Luftwaffe fighters. Berlin was bombed ‘blind’ through cloud, the tiny force dropping 69 tons of bombs. Four of the bombers were lost.
The raid’s de-briefing was covered by newspaper and magazine reporters and newsreel cameramen from Movietone News to witness General LeMay awarding an immediate Silver Star to Lt Col Mumford, leader of the 95th bomb Group, and a Distinguished Flying Cross to lead pilot Lt Al Brown. The following day the propaganda value was increased when Life Magazine photographed all the crewmen who returned from the mission posed around the B-17 ‘Berlin First’.
RAF Bomber Command, including so many RCAF, RAAF, RNZAF personnel, and the odd US airman, had been operating against Berlin since mid-November 1943.
While cousin Jim was flying to Berlin and back his father was employed on building the caissons for the Mulberry harbour - another major British contribution to the success of the 'Second Front'.
Stephen - yes - the right to brag about the USA's part in a combined Allied effort.
Sorry, I meant to suggest that Bulldog should be more respectful in future.
DeleteThe image of the British being saved by the American's saddens me somewhat. Yes it is important to acknowledge that without the extra manpower, munition and other supplies that the Americans brought with them who knows how long it would have continued, and for that we should show appreciation, BUT, and this is a big fat BUT (like those butts eating McDonald’s etc) you cannot for one second describe the Great British Armed Forces as inadequate in ability to defend their shores and the shores of their allies.
ReplyDeleteSo here we go with our BRAGGING for our tremendous achievements which many would see as defining points during the war:
Fact: The hundreds of pilots in the Battle of Britain RAF fighter squadrons were mainly British but included many commonwealth, Poles, Czechs, etc including 8 American volunteers). So this was pretty much a British show.
Fact: The turning points of the war against Germany and Italy was breaking the siege of Stalingrad by the Red Army, and the second battle of El Alamein by the British 8th Army.
From that point onwards Germany was in retreat until the end of the war on all fronts.
Many people have learned about D-Day from "Saving Private Ryan" and think that it was an American gig.
Fact: There were FIVE invasion beaches on D-Day. TWO American. TWO British. One Canadian. The majority of the men put ashore on day one were British and Canadian, the majority of the aircraft used were RAF, the majority of the ships used were Royal Navy and even the vast majority of landing craft used to land the Americans were crewed by the Royal Navy.
The first boots on the ground on D-Day were British Paratroopers who took Pegasus bridge just behind the beaches.
Our own industrial output was not too shabby however as Spitfires, Mosquito’s, Typhoon, And Tempest fighters, Hurricanes, Churchill and Comet tanks, Rolls Royce Merlin engines, Lancaster, Stirling, Halifax, Wellington bombers, Sten guns and all kinds of specialist armour were all produced here in great quantities.
So in summary we are all very grateful to the Americans for helping us both industrially and providing the manpower which ultimately tipped the balance back into our favour, but to all those buffoons who constantly spout that we would all be speaking German if it wasn’t for the U.S I'm afraid that it isn't entirely true.
Hayley - you hit the nail right on the head. Having resisted invasion by ourselves we had already avoided speaking German. Following which RAF bombers took the fight back to Germany. It does seem from where I'm standing that history is being rewritten by the USA in the movies. Also US assistance was Lend Lease - not free and gratis - funnily enough the debt was apparently paid off on 29th December 2006.
DeleteThe aircraft that was perhaps key in securing aerial supremacy over Europe was the P51 Mustang. The Mustang was designed to meet the British Purchasing Commission's specification. The US Allison engine underperformed and was replaced by the RR Merlin engine, built under licence by Packard. I think it was armed with Brownings too!
Fox news is on
ReplyDeleteis fox news something to do with noobs?
DeleteJohn may I ask what a noob is?
DeleteNewbie, newb, noob, or n00b is a slang term for a novice or newcomer, or somebody inexperienced in any profession or activity.
DeleteIt is mostly used in the online gaming world.
I hope this clears thing's up for you and we are always pleased to be of service.
thanks Brian, not a proper word then.
DeleteKeep it clean please, and what has fox news got to do with the post?
ReplyDeleteAnd another thing - always looking to link things back to the blog - 'the Way to the Stars' (or for the Americans amongst us 'Johnny in the Clouds') addresses the Allied relationship brilliantly - compare 'Prune' (David Tomlinson) and Joe Friselli (Bonar Colleano) - and David Archdale and Johnny Hollis - stereotypes perhaps but points well made. Superb! Watch that film!
ReplyDeleteStrange how after all them yrs stl can cause arguments
ReplyDeleteAny chance of America returning the price-less antiques you stole from the French people? And how about an apology to the German women, and as far as Atomic Bombs go Where did I read that one had been used or was it two?
ReplyDeletenot helpful or relevant to the blog.
Delete.................Military Casualties by Country 1939-1945...................
ReplyDeleteU.S. Troop Statistics:
16,112,566 - Number of U.S. troops that served in the conflict.
670,846 - Number of U.S. wounded.
U.S. Deaths:
Battle: 291,557
Non-Battle: 113,842
Total In-Theatre: 405,399
Australia: 23,365 dead; 39,803 wounded
Austria: 380,000 dead; 350,117 wounded
Belgium: 7,760 dead; 14,500 wounded
Bulgaria: 10,000 dead; 21,878 wounded
Canada: 37,476 dead; 53,174 wounded
China: 2,200,000 dead; 1,762,000 wounded
France: 210,671 dead; 390,000 wounded
Germany: 3,500,000 dead; 7,250,000 wounded
Great Britain: 329,208 dead; 348,403 wounded
Hungary: 140,000 dead; 89,313 wounded
Italy: 77,494 dead; 120,000 wounded
Japan: 1,219,000 dead; 295,247 wounded
Poland: 320,000 dead; 530,000 wounded
Romania: 300,000 dead; wounded unknown
Soviet Union: 7,500,000 dead; 5,000,000 wounded
United States: 405,399 dead; 670,846 wounded
Facts All Facts
September 1, 1939 - Germany invades Poland. Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Belgium, and France soon fall into German control, until only the United Kingdom is left to face Germany.
ReplyDeleteJune 10, 1940 - Italy joins the war on the side of Germany by declaring war against Britain (UK) and France. Fighting spreads to Greece and Northern Africa.
June 14, 1940 - German troops march into Paris.
July 1940-September 1940 - Germany and Great Britain fight an air war, the Battle of Britain, along the English coastline.
September 7, 1940-May 1941 - German bombing campaign of nightly air raids over London, known as the Blitz.
January 22, 1941 - British and Commonwealth troops take over the port city of Tobruk, Libya.
June 22, 1941 - Germany invades the Soviet Union.
September 1941 -- Japanese troops invade Indochina.
December 7, 1941 - Japan attacks Pearl Harbor, destroying more than half of the fleet of aircraft, and damaging all eight battleships. Japan also attacks Clark and Iba airfields in the Philippines destroying over half of the U.S. Army's aircraft there.
December 8, 1941 - President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivers the "a date which will live in infamy" speech to Congress, and the U.S declares war on Japan. Japan invades Hong Kong, Guam, the Wake Islands, Singapore, and British Malaya.
ReplyDeleteDecember 11, 1941 - Germany and Italy declare war on the U.S.
By Christmas 1941, Japan had taken Thailand, Guam, Hong Kong, and Wake Island.
1942 - The Allies stop the Axis Powers' advance in Northern Africa and the Soviet Union.
February 1942 - Japan invades the Malay Peninsula. Singapore surrenders within a week.
June 4-6, 1942 - Japan's plans to invade the Hawaiian Islands, starting at Midway Island, but the U.S. cracks the code of the mission. Japan attacks Midway and loses four aircraft carriers and over 200 planes and pilots in the first clear victory for the U.S.
August 19, 1942 - The battle for Stalingrad begins as Germany pushes further into Russia.
August 1942-February 1943 - U.S. Marines fight for and hold the Pacific island of Guadalcanal.
October 23, 1942 - British troops push Axis troops into retreating to Tunisia in the Second Battle of El Alamein.
February 1, 1943 - The German troops in Stalingrad surrender, defeated in large part by the Soviet winter. The defeat marks the halt of Germany's eastbound advance.
July 10, 1943 - Allied forces land in Italy.
July 25, 1943 - The King of Italy is restored to full power, and Mussolini is deposed and arrested.
November 1943-March 1944 - U.S. Marines invade the Solomon Islands at Bougainville to recapture it from the Japanese.
June 6, 1944 - D-Day, in which Allied forces land on five beaches at Normandy: Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword. The landing includes over 5,000 ships, 11,000 airplanes and over 150,000 service men.
August 25, 1944 - American and Free French forces liberate Paris.
ReplyDeleteFebruary 19-March 26, 1945 - U.S. Marines battle the Japanese for the island of Iwo Jima.
April 12, 1945 - President Roosevelt dies in Warm Springs, Georgia. Vice President Harry Truman takes the oath of office as president.
April 25, 1945 - Soviet troops surround Berlin.
April 28, 1945 - Mussolini is killed attempting to escape to Switzerland.
April 30, 1945 - Hitler and wife Eva Braun commit suicide.
May 7, 1945 - Germany surrenders in a red school house in Reims, Germany, Eisenhower's headquarters. V-E Day is celebrated on May 8 because that was the day the armistice went into effect.
May 8, 1945 - V-E Day, Victory in Europe. The war in Europe is officially over.
July 16, 1945 - First successful test of the atomic bomb in Alamogordo, New Mexico.
July 29, 1945 - President Harry Truman warns Japan that the country will be destroyed if it does not surrender unconditionally. Japan continues fighting.
August 6, 1945 - The first atomic bomb used in warfare, nicknamed Little Boy, is dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, killing up to 140,000 people.
August 9, 1945 - After getting no response from the Japanese government after the Hiroshima bombing, a second atomic bomb, nicknamed Fat Man, is dropped on Nagasaki, killing up to 80,000 people.
August 14, 1945 - Japan unconditionally agrees to accept the terms of the Potsdam Declaration and end the war. V-J Day, Victory over Japan, is declared.
September 2, 1945 - Japan signs the formal surrender aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
Stephen, thanks for your thoroughness.
DeleteI shall say this very slowly, since you evidently missed a lot of school and think movies are real ( . ) ( . ) < T|T>
ReplyDeleteM o v i e s
a r e
n o t
h i s t o r y.
M o v i e s
a r e
e n t e r t a i n m e n t
a n d
a
c o m m e r c i a l
p r o d u c t
d e s i g n e d
t o
m a k e
m o n e y.
Thanks for that Anonymous, you have obviously missed the point completely. A film can also be allegorical – watch it and you may get the point, if you're still unsure ask me politely and I'll be happy to explain.
DeleteI am surprised that the moderators have allowed some of your rants, vulgar language and lack of good grammar, I am accustomed to bashing American hating Brits.
ReplyDeleteThe British (and by extension, the Commonwealth nations) DID NOT win the war all by themselves.
The USSR DID NOT win the war all by themselves.
All of them including the "U.S" TOGETHER won the war.
In the famous words of Stephen Mulhern
ReplyDelete........UNBELIEVABLE...........
Bit of an oxymoron there, Anonymous.
DeleteUnbelievable? Let me explain -
I totally agree that the defeat of the German/Italian/Japanese Axis was a combined Allied effort - land, sea and air.
The Allied bombing campaign was generally a parallel collaboration with the RAF and USAAF following their own night and daylight bombing doctrines, not always with complete co-operation.
This was evident in the 'Battle of Berlin' - the Eighth Air Force could not safely attack the German capital without the protection of long range escort fighters. To prosecute their own programme of operations RAF Bomber Command needed the cover of longer dark nights between November and March.
The RAF's window of opportunity had almost passed by the time Mustang fighters were available in such numbers that the USAAF could start their 'Big Week' bombing initiative in early March 1944.
By the end of March the Allies' priorities changed from industrial targets to the preparation for the invasion which the USAAF and RAF undertook in tandem, a collaboration which continued until the end of the war in Europe.
Be assured that I have the utmost respect for all Allied troops who served in the Second World War, whether Russian, U.S., Commonwealth, Poles, Czechs, Free French, etc., etc, but especially aircrew personnel.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with you John, it is easy these days to get carried away with silly arguments, it is important to step back and look at the bigger picture. Those brave men(and women) fought shoulder to shoulder with their foreign allies to achieve the common good. We can sit back and moan that one played a greater part than the other, but the one thing that gets forgotten is that each and every foot soldier, sailor and airman laid his life on the line to ensure us bunch of 'noobs' (apologies for the use of this ridiculous word) had the freedom to basically slag each other off without facing the firing squad!
ReplyDeleteWe have visited the vast graveyards across Normandy and northern France, and whatever nation the graves are for they are always identical and kept by the French people in such pristine condition that maybe we could learn lessons from those who remember what those men achieved and gave up rather than who won the war. Every single one of them won the war and played their part, and it is saddening to know that most will never appreciate what they sacrificed for our freedom.
I can only speak from experience and I can honestly say I have been all over France visiting the graves and war memorials that are related to WWII land, Sea and Air but for me the hardest thing to take on board is when you see a grave marked unknown this is some ones Son or Daughter or Wife Or even Husband! after reading the comments here within I can honestly say with all my heart "I would sooner have an unmarked "unknown" Grave stone of me then appear on a blog, forum, social, media site as an Anonymous poster" keeping that in mind not all Anonymous posts on here are offensive or sarcastic or using irony in order to mock or convey contempt towards others.
ReplyDeleteIf you could just sit there for 5 minutes and try to think of this - What it would be like to go out on a sortie and you as a young 17 year old turned to your C.O and said Sir I have a question what are the odds of us coming back ? And you hear the words 50 50. All your loved ones would get back was a small letter saying "Missing in Action"; you think about it long and hard! How many mothers of this time sat by the door every morning waiting for a letter that never arrived and a loved one that never returned home?
I can fully engage with the younger generation as I for one am still how you say "up" but maybe just maybe some people not all should take a moment and have a little time to remember who gave their all so we can vote, we can debate, we can choose and pick what we want, to have a democracy where we can vote for what is best for us all. But remember we only have this order today because of what a generation gave us and they paid the ultimate price and that was their life.
"Never in the field of Human conflict, is so much owed, by so many, to so few"
Lest We Forget