Showing posts with label War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Boer War news (1901)

The Guernsey Advertiser dated February 2nd 1901
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The 2nd Boer War between the forces of the British Empire and the Dutch settlers of the Transvaal Republic and the Orange Free State started in 1899 and went through 3 distinctive phases - the Boer Offensive, the British Offensive and, from September 1900 until the War ended in May 1902, the Boer Guerrilla War. The story headed 'A De Wet story' makes it all sound so very gentlemanly, but it was far from it, with nearly 20,000 soldiers and about 28,000 civilians killed.

Sunday, 4 May 2014

Far East Crisis send Ike Home (1958)

Daily Express dated Thursday September 11th 1958


In January 1955, the U.S. Congress passed the “Formosa Resolution,” which gave President Eisenhower total authority to defend Formosa (now Taiwan) and the off-shore islands of Quemoy and Mazu. The Eisenhower Administration considered many options, ranging from convincing Chiang Kai-Shek to give up the islands to employing nuclear weapons against the People’s Republic of China. Luckily for World Peace and probably due to Russian pressure, China backed down and stopped bombing the disputed Island in the Formosa Straits. 
In 1958 the bombing resumed and President Eisenhower was concerned that the loss of the islands would hurt Nationalist morale and might be a precursor to the Communist conquest of Formosa. The United States thus arranged to re-supply the Republic of China garrisons on Quemoy and Mazu. This brought an abrupt end to the bombardment and eased the crisis. Eventually, the Communist and Nationalist Chinese came to an arrangement in which they shelled each other’s garrisons on alternate days. This continued for twenty years.

See also this post and this post.

Sunday, 20 April 2014

6 Minute War (1979)

Sunday Mirror dated Sunday November 11th 1979
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Those were the days my friends when total annihilation of the human race was just a button push away, or at least some-idiot-not-checking-that-a–training-exercise-could-be-mistaken-for-the-real-thing away. This was just one of at least 4 false alarms during the Cold War.

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Fall of Saigon (1975)

Daily Mail dated Wednesday 30th April 1975

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From 1973 direct US Military involvement in South Vietnam was being wound down and by 1975, what remained of the South Vietnamese Army was not capable of withstanding the advance of the Communist North forces and it was inevitable that the South’s capital Saigon would fall sooner or later.
In early April 1975 the Communist Army was getting so close that many US personnel were evacuated from Tan Son Nhut airport, but by the last week in April the Communists were on the outskirts of Saigon and Operation Frequent Wind was activated. Helicopters were used to evacuate over 1300 Americans and nearly 6000 ‘vulnerable’ Vietnamese from central Saigon to aircraft carriers waiting out at sea.
The North Vietnamese forces didn’t interfere with the evacuation and only moved into the city when it had finished at 08:00 on the 30th April. The Vietnam War, which had started18 years earlier, finally ended. Saigon was re-named Ho Chi Minh City.

Sunday, 9 February 2014

Invasion of Grenada

Daily Mirror dated Wednesday 26th October 1983

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The Caribean island of Grenada was an British colony up until 1974 when it was given Independence. In 1979 a pro-Cuban and pro-USSR People's Revolutionary Government took over by force. By 1983 the US were getting nervous about the number of Cuban military personnel that were on the Island and staged an invasion on 25th October. The local Government was overthrown and after the American troops left in December 1983, a democratic election was held and the Grenada National Party won.
The U.N. and British Governments were highly critical of the invasion.

Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Random Cutting - Convoy captured by 4000 Afghans (1919)

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This cutting from July 1919 is about an incident in the Third Anglo-Afghan War that lasted from May 1919 until August 1919. 

Sunday, 1 December 2013

England scores 280 first innings

Sunday Pictorial dated Sunday August 15th 1926
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I must admit that on reading this headline ‘England scores 280 first innings’ I had no idea whether it was a ‘Hooray for England’ or a ‘England team let us down again’ headline. I don’t understand cricket scoring.
A look on this web page told me England won the 5th Test in 1926 by 289 runs.
Ask me in 5 minutes who won and by how many runs and I will have forgotten, but I am sure there are people out there that will find these pages interesting. 

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The death of John Thomas Derham resulted from a fight with his friend Alphonso (or Alphonse) Smith over Smith’s wife Catherine.
Smith was found not guilty of murder or manslaughter in November 1926 but sentenced to 12 months for possession of a firearm with intent to injure. The comparatively lenient sentence was passed because the judge believed that Smith only intended to kill himself.

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In fact the Reverend John Alexander Smith died of his head wound the next day. 

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At least this fire in a paint factory in Southwark ended without loss of life and even three cats were saved.

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In June 1916 Lord Kitchener sailed on the battle cruiser HMS Hampshire for a diplomatic mission to Russia, but the ship struck a mine laid by U-boat U-75 and sank. Kitchener, his staff, and 643 of the crew of 655 were drowned or died of exposure. His body was never found.
In 1926, a hoaxer, Frank Power, claimed that a Norwegian fisherman had found Kitchener’s body. Power brought a coffin back from Norway and prepared it for burial in St. Paul's. At this point, however, the authorities intervened and the coffin was opened in the presence of police and a distinguished pathologist. The box was found to contain only tar for weight. Power was never prosecuted.

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I have a funny feeling that whoever tried to fill this in didn’t stand an chance of winning that rather nice Bullnose Morris Cowley, and should have sent off for the 64 page booklet on how to complete crosswords. Rather an odd feature of this grid is the use of clues marked ‘actual’ so R.T.B. (actual) is literally RTB. The other oddity I’ve noticed is 20 across and 20 down is the same isolated square with a ‘D’ pre-printed.
The first crossword to appear in a UK newspaper was only 2 years previously in 1924.

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Arthur Ferrier was born and started working as a cartoonist in Glasgow, then he moved to London and drew joke cartoons for newspapers and  magazines.
In 1930 he created Britain’s first ‘glamour’ cartoon strip called ‘Film Fanny’. The most famous ‘glamour’ strip was the Daily Mirror’s ‘Jane’. The Sunday Pictorial also published his ‘Our Dumb Blonde’ strip, which ran from 1939 to 1946, followed by ‘Spotlight on Sally’ and ‘Eve’.

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“By Gad, Sir! Whatever next? They’ll be teaching the little blighters to use the Interweb, what ever that it. A damn good thrashing would do them a sight more good. Pass the cane!”

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Only 13 years before World War II and, apart from talk of getting rid of horses, this could be from World War I.

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Probably the Bristol Bulldog single seater biplane fighter introduced into service in 1927.
The racing seaplane mentioned here is the Gloster VI, which was entered for the 1929 Schneider Trophy race, but was beaten by the Supermarine S6. 

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Ah, the old ‘daring-short-skirt-flat-chested-coal-scuttle for a hat’ look. Although the one on the right has gone for the mis-tossed pancake hat. Nice drawings though by Renee Maude.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

World Waits for Hitler's Answer

Sunday Graphic dated Sunday September 3rd 1939
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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.
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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.

Sunday, 4 August 2013

Sinking of the General Belgrano

Daily Mirror dated Tuesday May 4th 1982
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A month to the day after Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands (see post), the Argentine light cruiser General Belgrano was sunk by HMS Conqueror using 3 torpedoes. 770 of the Belgrano’s crew were rescued but 323 died.
This was the day the Sun newspaper went with the headline ‘GOTCHA!’ which was changed for the later editions to something a little more appropriate

‘It’s a Knockout’ started in France as ‘Jeux sans Frontier’. Stuart Hall, who has been in the news lately and in the nick for a while yet, hosted the UK version. About 800 people were using the stand when it collapsed and about 60 were taken to Scunthorpe General Hospital.

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A potpourri of Falkland related news. Like the RMS Queen Mary and RMS Queen Elizabeth, it was the QEII’s turn to be used as a troop ship.

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Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev had met in Vienna in 1979. By 1982 Brezhnev was ailing and in November he died. Reagan actually had 5 summit meeting between 1985 and 1988 but with Mikhail Gorbachev.

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The original Mods had died out by the late 1960’s, some having morphed into skinheads or just grown too old. The skinheads in their turn died out, but in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s both subcultures enjoyed revivals and, evident from this article, emulated their cultural forefathers by spending Bank Holidays causing mayhem at seaside resorts.

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To celebrate the 10th anniversary of Mastermind they held this Champion of Champions contest. Sir David Hunt answered questions on Alexander the Great to get 13 points and increased this to 28 in General Knowledge.

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A warning to those that take what they read on the Web as gospel – several sites including the Oracle, sorry, Wikepedia, state that this experimental 3D broadcast on TV South’s ‘The Real World’  happened in February 1982. I notice that all the sites seem to have cut and pasted the same wording from one another. They also claim that the first full 3D programme – a showing of the 3D western film ‘Fort Ti’ was shown in December 1982. Or November. Or even October.

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This appears to be a fairly early satellite tracking and positioning system probably using the first GPS satellite that had been launched in 1978. I can’t find any reference to the acronym SARGOS anywhere.

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The Advanced Passenger Train or APT was designed to run on existing track at speeds of up to 155mph so had a hydraulic tilting system to keep the train on the track on bends. The first passengers were carried in December 1981 but there were problems from the start and the APTs were withdrawn from service. High Speed Trains with a top speed of 125mph replaced them.

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Over the next 10 years ‘Wogan’ ran to 252 editions during which the Irish mumbler interviewed everyone from Eddie the Eagle Edwards to Vincent Price to Roy Orbison via Paul McCartney and Fanny Craddock.

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Wrong. Faye Dunaway didn’t appear in Octopussy, the 4 years younger Maude Adams took the role.

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Wandsworth boy Frank Bruno had his first professional fight in March 1982, which he won along with his next 20 fights. He won the European Boxing Union Heavyweight Title in 1985 and the World Boxing Council Heavyweight Title in 1995.