Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 March 2015

Cutting - Audie Murphy obituary (1971)

1st July 1971
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Audie Murphy was one of 12 children in a poor tenant farmer family in rural Texas. His father came and went from their life and finally left for good. When Murphy was 16 his mother died and at 17 soon after Pearl Harbour and America's entry into World War II, he joined the US Army by lying about his age. By the end of the War he had been awarded just about every medal for bravery in combat available including the Congressional Medal of Honour. After the War he turned to film acting and appeared in about 50 film and TV roles including playing himself in the film of his autobiography 'To Hell and Back'. 


Sunday, 8 March 2015

Cutting -First Evacuation of Schools (1939)

28th September 1938
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This is an aspect of the World War 2 London evacuation of children just 3 weeks after the outbreak, that I've never come across before. The use of the words 'cripple' and 'little cripples' as well as describing other kids as ' normal children' would have gone unnoticed at the time but rather jar these days.

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Cutting - Hitler's Deputy escapes to Britain (1941)

13th May 1941
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Hess joined the Nazi on 1st July 1920, and was at Hitler's side in November 1923 for the Beer Hall Putsch, a failed attempt to seize control of the government of Bavaria. Whilst serving time in jail for this attempted coup, Hess helped Hitler write Mein Kampf. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Hess was appointed Deputy Führer and received a post in Hitler's cabinet.
Having learnt to fly at the end of WWI he retained his interest and obtained his private pilot's licence in 1929. During the 1930’s he owned 3 aircraft and logged many hours flying time.

On 10 May 1941, Hess flew himself across the Channel to Scotland, claiming that he wanted to meet with the Duke of Hamilton and plot a peace treaty that would lead to the supremacy of Germany within Europe and leave the British Empire intact. He crash landed near Eaglesham and gave his name as Alfred Horn, a friend of the Duke. Hess was taken to hospital for injuries sustained during his landing, the Duke was informed of the prisoner and visited him. Hess revealed who he was and why he’d come to Scotland. The Duke, also a keen airman, flew himself to London and informed Winston Churchill.

Hess was imprisoned by the British authorities until the end of the war and sentenced to life imprisonment at the Nuremberg trials. He spent the rest of his time in Spandau Prison and apparently committed suicide at the age of 93 in 1987.

Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Cutting - Demoted General (1944)

8th June 1944
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A little tit-bit following the D-Day landings from an American paper. On the 18th April 1944 in the Claridge's Hotel restaurant in London the rather drunk Ninth Airforce Services Commander, Major General Miller complained to a nurse that something he had ordered from the States would not arrive in England before June 15th "well after the invasion". 
This wasn't the only breach in the extremely secret D-Day plans. For instance back in March Basil Liddell Hart, a militery expert, had been with Duncan Sandys, the Minister for Supply, at another London hotel when he showed the Minister what appeared to be details of the invasion and complained to Sandys that he hadn't been officially consulted. Sandys notified Churchill and Liddell Hart had his knuckles rapped.

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Random Cutting - Pro-Soviet letter by Sean O'Casey (1939)

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This letter by Irish dramatist Sean O'Casey was published in the Reynold's News dated the 1st October 1939. In August 1939 Stalin's Russia and Hitler's Germany had signed a non-aggression pact and had divided Poland into Soviet and German regions. The USSR would finally join the Allies against Germany in 1941. Sean O'Casey a life long Socialist seems, with hindsight, to have had a terribly naive view of life under Stalin, although it must be admitted that even those who knew what was going on in Russia turned a blind eye after 1941.

Sunday, 28 September 2014

Evacuation of Children from Guernsey (1940)

Evening Press (Guernsey) dated June 19th 1940
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The Channel Islands were occupied by Germany from 30 June 1940 until the liberation on 9 May 1945. In advance of the occupation 17,000 out of a population of 42000 evacuated to England. The Channel Islands were the only part of the British Isles to be invaded and occupied by German forces during the war.

Sunday, 24 August 2014

Final Ultimatum To-day (1945)

Daily Mail dated Thursday August 9th 1945
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On August 6th 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. On August 8th 1945 the Soviet Union declared war on Japan. Later that same day, the United States dropped a second atomic bomb, this time on the city of Nagasaki. Emperor Hirohito intervened and ordered  Supreme Council for the Direction of the War to accept the terms for ending the war that the Allies had set down in the Potsdam Declaration. 
On August 15th Emperor Hirohito made a radio broadcast across the Empire to announce the surrender of Japan to the Allies.
On August 28th the occupation of Japan by the Allied Powers began and the surrender was signed aboard the USS Missouri on September 2nd 1945

Wednesday, 6 August 2014

Random Cutting - New York World's Fair bombing (1940)

5th July 1940
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The New York World's Fair ran from April to August in both 1939 and 1940. By the second season World War II had started and some exhibitors dropped out. On July 4th 1940 an unexploded time-bomb was found in the British Pavillion and taken outisde by a security man. Two officers of the NYPD Bomb squad arrived and tried to defuse it, the bomb exploded killing them and injuring by-standers. A police manhunt failed to find who had planted the bomb and the case remains open and unsolved..

Sunday, 3 August 2014

We Take Bayeux (1944)

San Francisco Chronicle dated Thursday June 8th 1944
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Click to Read

An American perspective on the situation 24 - 36 hours after the Allies' D-Day Normandy landings on June 6th 1944. 
Also see this post.

Sunday, 20 July 2014

Britain replies to Hitler's Peace Proposals (1939)

Daily Sketch dated Saturday October 7th 1939
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At this early stage of World War II, between invading Poland and while planning to invade France, Adolf Hitler made a speech in the Reichstag in which he condemned the War with Britain and France as a waste of life and that if those countries were willing to a mutual cease fire and if they would allow Hitler to continue with his policies in Poland, then the War could be over there and then. 
Prime Minister Chamberlain's speech in the House of Commons on the 12th October said, in part, “We must take it, then, that the proposals which the German Chancellor puts forward for the establishment of what he calls ‘the certainty of European security’ are to be based on recognition of his conquests and his right to do what he pleases with the conquered. It would be impossible for Great Britain to accept any such basis without forfeiting her honour and abandoning her claim that international disputes should be settled by discussion and not by force." And so the War continued.

Sunday, 29 June 2014

Sinking of the Ark Royal (1941)

Daily Express dated Tuesday December 2nd 1941
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The aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal had in fact been torpedoed by U-boat U81 two weeks earlier on November 13th 1941 while heading for Gibraltar after delivering some Hurricane fighters to Malta. She sank early the next morning about 30 miles off Gibraltar. Thankfully there was only one fatality, Able Seaman Edward Mitchell, who was killed in the initial explosion.

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Random Cutting - War Declared in Chamberlain's Speech (1939)

4th September 1939
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This is the full text of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's speech broadcast by the BBC on Sunday the 3rd September 1939 announcing the start of World War II as published in the Manchester Guardian the following day.

Sunday, 18 May 2014

Complete Surrender (1945)

The Star dated Monday 7th May 1945
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Click to Read

Adolf Hitler had commited suicide in Berlin on April 30th 1945 and had been succeeded by Admiral Karl Donitz who negociated Germany's surrender to the Allies which was signed on May 7th in Reims by General Alfred Jodl and endorsed by Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel in Berlin on the 9th.
The 8th May was indeed to be Victory in Europe (VE) Day. Victory over Japan (VJ) Day was to follow on August 15th.

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Random Cuttings - Mussolini resigns and Italy Surrenders (1943)

26th July 1943
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9th September 1943
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Benito Mussolini had been politically insecure since the war in North Africa had started to turn against the Axis powers in late 1942. Unrest at home with strikes, inflated food prices and an unwelcome German army presence along with the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943 led to the Dictator 'resigning' i.e. being called to the King's palace and told he was being replaced and then arrested. 

Mussolini's replacement, Marshal Pietro Bagdoglio negotiated an armistice with the Allies and the surrender was announced on the 8th September, the day Allied troops landed on mainland Italy. The Italian government declared War on Germany on the 13th but the Italian Army didn't actually fight the Germans who were still occuping a large part of the country. It took the Allies until April 1945 to clear the Germans out.

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Random Cutting - This was their Finest Hour (1940)

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On the 18th June 1940, just over a month after the evacuation of British tropps at Dunkirk, Prime Minister Winston Churchill gave one of his great speeches to the House of Commons. He spoke at length about the fall of France and Britain's determination to continue to fight the Nazis. In the part of the speech shown in this cutting from The Times, he used the memorable phrase 'This was their finest hour'. 

Sunday, 30 March 2014

3 German Planes Down (1940)

Evening Standard dated Thursday June 20th 1940
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A little over 2 weeks after the evacuation at Dunkirk, this front page doesn't do much to cheer up the British public. On the 18th June Prime Minister Winston Churchill had made his now famous 'their finest hour' speech in the House of Commons following the Fall of France and things were looking pretty grim with the Luftwaffe soon to begin its 8 month long Blitz on England.

Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Random Cutting - Eichmann trial (1961)

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Adolf Eichmann was one of the major organizers of the Holocaust. He oversaw the logistics of mass deportation of Jews to concentration camps in German-occupied Eastern Europe.
After the War, he fled to Argentina, where in 1960, he was captured by Israeli Mossad operatives and taken to Israel to face trial for war crimes. He was found guilty and executed by hanging in 1962.

Sunday, 8 December 2013

Chamberlain's Last Plea for Peace

Daily Mirror dated Tuesday September 27th 1938
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Click to read (Cont'd from Front page)
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On September 12th 1938 Adolf Hitler gave a speech in which he demanded the return of the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia. On the 15th the British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain flew to Berlin for talks with Hitler, but couldn’t resolve the crisis. They had further meetings on the 18th and 22nd. On September 29th Chamberlain, Hitler, Mussolini and the French President Daladier met in Munich and decided, without consulting the Czech government, that the country should be partitioned and Hitler should have control of Sudetenland. Chamberlain arrived back at Heston aerodrome with his piece of paper and ‘peace in our time’ speech. War had been averted – for the time being.

Click to read
Roosevelt did what he could to help avert a European war despite the overwhelming isolationist views of the majority of Americans. They were quite willing to supply arms and food to England but did not want any ‘on the ground’ involvement until Japan attacked Pearl Harbour in December 1941.

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Read with hindsight this is a terrible story of a Polish Jew being deported back to almost certain death, but at the time the general public in Britain were generally xenophobic and to some degree anti-Semitic. It should also be remembered that they didn’t really know at this time what was going on in the concentration camps.

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RMS Queen Elizabeth was the sister ship to the Cunard liner RMS Queen Mary and was launched later this day at the Clydebank shipyard by the Queen herself. She wasn’t ready for her maiden voyage until after the War had broken out so her first trip to New York was done in the utmost secrecy. The ship was painted grey and the crew didn’t know its destination until after it had left port.

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There’s a word you don’t see in tabloid headlines these days – ‘repudiates’.
Two words I wouldn’t expect to find in a 1938 tabloid – ‘      ‘ and ‘        ‘.

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Coin operated vending machines appeared in the UK in the late 1880’s. In my experience the most common products available were sweets, particularly chocolate bars, and cigarettes. I’d have thought that keeping fish and chips hot for any length of time would result in soggy chips and soft batter. They certainly didn’t catch on in any great numbers. 

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Just shows how dangerous it was in the 1930’s to be a woman of loose moral habits. According to The Times for November 5th 1938 David Leonard Knight was found not guilty and discharged

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Despite the War in Europe the 1939/40 New York World’s Fair went ahead. The British Pavilion displayed an original copy of the Magna Carta, but by the end of the Expo it was thought too risky to transport it back to England so it stayed in Fort Knox until 1947. Germany didn’t attend the Fair.

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A happy story for a change. A young couple in love and destined to marry? Maybe not. The only entry in the FreeBDM marriage records for Doris Deciacco has her hitching up with a Robert Jack in 1947. What happened to William?

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T.R. Newton may have been Cheshire’s strongest man and capable of swimming across Morecambe Bay but could he eat three shredded wheat?

Sunday, 15 September 2013

Japs Begin to Give up Arms

Sunday Pictorial dated Sunday August 19th 1945
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On August 6th 1945 the USAAF dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima in Japan.  On August 9th a second atomic bomb was dropped, this time on the city of Nagasaki. On the 15th Emperor Hirohito broadcast a radio message to his Empire announcing the surrender of Japan to the Allies, although the formal surrender wasn’t signed until September 2nd.
Officially a state of war existed between the USA and Japan right up to April 1952.

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A 2 page spread proves that the War is over… for some. That’s Marlene Dietrich on the right doing her bit for peace.

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When Reinhard Heydrich was assassinated in Czechoslovakia in 1942 it was Karl Hermann Frank and Heydrich’s replacement Kurt Daluege that organized the total destruction of the village of Lidice and its people. Both Frank and Daluege were convicted of war crimes and sentenced to death by hanging.

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The civil war between Chiang Kai-Shek and the communists under Mao Tse-Tung went on until 1949 when Mao forced Kai-Shek and his people to evacuate from the mainland to the island of Taiwan.

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Since she (or he) was first sighted in 1871 the Loch Ness Monster has been a staple ‘light relief’ item for newspapers.

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Maria Anna Minges (sometimes written Marianne) was sentenced to death twice in 1949 by a French Military court, but was inexplicably given a free pardon in 1950.

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The War may have been won but the political battles between Labour and Conservative continued. Winston Churchill’s wartime National Government was replaced by Clem Attlee’s Labour Government in the General Election of July 1945.
“… too easy for too long for politicians to evade responsibility for their blunders..” Well I’m glad that sort of thing doesn’t happen these days!

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I wonder if little Colin Dexter is out there now still defying death. He’d be about 75.

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The demobilization of about 5 million men and women began in June 1945, the last wartime conscript being returned to civvy-street in 1949. No wonder there were strikes by disgruntled service men.

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A typical example of the perennial Sunday newspaper exposé of vice. All that is missing is the ‘I was invited up to her room but made my excuses and left’ line.

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The 18-month National Service imposed on most 18 year-old men lasted from the end of the War until 1960. 

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Footballers threatening to go on strike because some were being paid £8 a match and others only £4. Makes you wonder how Gareth Bale will survive on only £250,000 a week.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

World Waits for Hitler's Answer

Sunday Graphic dated Sunday September 3rd 1939
 Click to Read
Click to Read
On September 2nd 1939 the British Government, led by Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, sent an ultimatum to Adolf Hitler stating that unless he evacuate all German troops from Poland by 11am on the 3rd, we would declare war.
So if you were reading this Sunday Graphic over your breakfast table on the morning of the 3rd you would be, as the headline suggests, waiting for Hitler’s answer and no doubt listening to the radio.
At a quarter past 11 you would have heard Chamberlain’s sombre voice intone

"This morning the British Ambassador in Berlin handed the German Government a final note stating      that, unless we heard from them by 11 o'clock that they were prepared at once to withdraw their troops from Poland, a state of war would exist between us. I have to tell you now that no such undertaking has been received, and that consequently this country is at war with Germany…”

The whole broadcast lasted just under 13 minutes. Our war with Nazi Germany lasted 5 years and 8 months.
Click to Read
The National Services (Armed Forces) Act of 1939 made all able-bodied men between the ages of 18 and 41 eligible for call-up. Those in reserved occupations such as dock workers, miners, farmers, scientists, Merchant Seamen, railway workers, and utility workers (water, gas, electricity) were exempt. 

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After the re-shuffle the War Cabinet looked like this –

Neville Chamberlain - Prime Minister
Sir Samuel Hoare - Lord Privy Seal
Sir John Simon - Chancellor of the Exchequer
Lord Halifax - Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
Leslie Hore-Belisha - Secretary of State for War
Sir Kingsley Wood - Secretary of State for Air
Winston Churchill - First Lord of the Admiralty
Lord Chatfield - Minister for Coordination of Defence
Lord Hankey - Minister without Portfolio

Anthony Eden became Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs but not a Cabinet member.
Churchill took over as Prime Minister when Neville Chamberlain resigned in May 1940.

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German troops invaded Poland on September 1st 1939 supported by widespread aerial bombing. This was in direct response to an apparent attack the previous evening by Polish saboteurs on a German radio station. The attack was in fact carried out by SS troops disguised as Poles.

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Australia, New Zealand and India declared war on Germany during the afternoon of the 3rd. Canada followed suit on the 10th. South Africa had a long history of German allegiance and, although in 1939 it was a British Dominion State, its Prime Minister was pro-Germany and wanted the country to stay neutral. On September the 4th he was deposed and a pro-British Prime Minister, Jan Smuts, took over and South Africa declared war. 

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The zookeepers were afraid that due to potential bomb damage the poisonous little blighters would escape. What about the lions, tigers, bears, wolves and not forgetting those devils incarnate the chimpanzees? 

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It was generally believed that when War came the German Luftwaffe would immediately start bombing British cities much as it was doing in Poland, therefore the evacuation from major cities, not only of children but also pregnant women, disabled people and mothers with children under 5 along with all the teachers and carers that accompanied them, started on September 1st. During the next 4 days over 3 million people were displaced. 

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Not the usual Himmler/Goering/Goebbels triumvirate.
Walther Funk survived the War and sentenced at Nuremberg to Life. He was released from Spandau in 1957 and died in 1960.
Dr Wilhelm Frick was also tried at Nuremberg and was hanged in October 1946.
After his ‘peace’ mission to Scotland, Rudolph Hess was tried and spent the rest of his life in Spandau Prison, committing suicide there in 1987.
Hans Lammers was sentenced to 20 years for crimes against humanity but this was reduced to 10 years and in 1952 he was pardoned. He died in 1962.
Wilhelm Keitel was the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces throughout the War and it has been said that if Hitler hadn’t contradicted his campaign plans then Germany would have won World War II. He was tried by the International Military Tribunal immediately after the War and hanged.

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During the War the Allies’ armed forces were augmented by many exiles from occupied Europe including French, Danish, Polish, Czech, Belgian, Dutch, Norwegian and Greek refugees.

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The Standard 8 might give you 50 miles per gallon but unfortunately with the outbreak of the War petrol was the first thing to be rationed as of September 16th.

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The story about Spencer Tracy reminds me of one I read about Laurence Olivier and Dustin Hoffman when they were making Marathon Man. Hoffman, he of the New York Method school, was complaining that he couldn’t really get the motivation for a particular scene, so Sir Larry said, “Try acting, old boy.”
‘The Wizard of Oz’ starring Julie Garland was released in Britain in November 1939.
‘One Million B.C.’ turned up in 1940 produced, not by Cecil B DeMille but by that other Hollywood veteran D W Griffith and directed by Hal Roach.
The boy-wonder Orson Welles, who, in 1939, was known for his stage and radio work as actor, director, producer and writer, was about to make his first feature film – ‘Citizen Kane’ – long regarded as the greatest American film ever made.