The Secrets of Underground Britain - WARTIME SECRETS

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 283

  • @markjennings2315
    @markjennings2315 3 года назад +22

    In the mid to late 80's I worked as an engineer and welded track sections all over the network. Some off these abandoned stations are facinating time capsules and definitely have a 'presence' and at 02:30 in the morning walking alone along the tunnels gets the hairs raising on the back of your neck in certain places. A few fellow engineers would refuse to work alone in particular locations. Balham station was a real dreaded location due to the awful loss of life there during the Blitz in 1940.

  • @michaelpage7691
    @michaelpage7691 6 лет назад +90

    You Poms are an incredible lot in times of hardship...praise to all those that produced all the structures and the people who worked in them.👍🏻🇦🇺

    • @fraggit
      @fraggit 5 лет назад +23

      Well you Diggers have always been there by our side in a lot of those hardships, so equal respect to your nation brother. Also, send my respect to your neighbours the Kiwi's. Always good to know the ANZACs have got our backs. If your interested in secret underground structures, and who isn't, try this site www.subbrit.org.uk/ The first guy they interview in this video, Nick Catford, runs the site. I'd love his job.

    • @ladypoppy6117
      @ladypoppy6117 4 года назад +2

      Hippie Chic the French can fight, it's their Leaders that are useless. They couldn't lead a fight to get out of a paper bag...let's at least be honest here 😂😂😂🇬🇧🇦🇺🇨🇦🇳🇿🇺🇸

    • @rfburns5444
      @rfburns5444 3 года назад

      Rack off you flaming gallah

    • @peterwilson5528
      @peterwilson5528 3 года назад +2

      Australia used to be tough but now its a puppet state for the USA. You find oil outback and suddenly an American occupation force arrives on the pretext that China is the threat. Imagine the gritty Aussie actually let in the Yankee trojan horse.

    • @michaelpage7691
      @michaelpage7691 3 года назад +2

      Peter Wilson. It's true, but England is too far away for us to utilise them if situations arise. 😁🇦🇺👍🏻

  • @beachcomberbloke462
    @beachcomberbloke462 4 года назад +36

    How refreshing to have a well researched documentary not presented by a so called celebrity.Thank you so much.

    • @REDRAWVISIONS
      @REDRAWVISIONS 3 года назад +3

      Excellent documentary.

    • @moniquem783
      @moniquem783 3 года назад +3

      I’ve become a major fan of British documentaries during lockdown. They seem to really have a knack for making history fascinating. My favourites would have to be the historic farm vids, but there are so many that are excellent on all sorts of topics. I learnt heaps in 2020!

    • @dougsteel7414
      @dougsteel7414 3 года назад +3

      Yes! I can't help thinking the celebrities have little knowledge of or interest in the subject beyond wages.

    • @PaulanthonyBridge-kt4eg
      @PaulanthonyBridge-kt4eg Год назад +2

      Yes velly, velli buch.

    • @skichrishd
      @skichrishd 11 месяцев назад

      Thank you, I tried my best

  • @Freespeech141
    @Freespeech141 3 года назад +11

    This is fascinating! I worked in the Basil St hotel Knightsbridge in 1974. There was a closed off entrance to Knightsbridge tube in the basement, we could look through an iron rail to the walkway, still with war time advertising signs! I wish I’d looked into it more at the time!
    I was young and young people don’t appreciate these great historic places, even if obscure.
    I did visit the Cabinet War Rooms in Whitehall once open.
    We were told there was a secret escape from there for the staff if London was invaded.

  • @alexpaul5103
    @alexpaul5103 3 года назад +3

    One of the best documentaries I've seen in ages!!!!!! Thank you :)

  • @davidhookway1451
    @davidhookway1451 4 года назад +3

    What a fantastic program. I grew up living in Corsham in the late 60s/early 70s. My mum and granddad both worked at Copenacre Naval Stores. Both had been down into the areas underground. As kids we knew all about these "secret tunnels" and were constantly trying to find our way in. The tunnel for the ammunition storage was located at the east end of Box Tunnel. We played inside old "Pill Boxes" . Of course we played "War" ! lol. What a great child hood!

  • @kevinsullivan3448
    @kevinsullivan3448 10 лет назад +2

    This was so much better than many 'documentaries' that vaguely hint at the purposes of old fortifications and structures without giving any real meat. Fascination subject as well.

  • @martyjackson2014
    @martyjackson2014 4 года назад +4

    I worked at Down Street Station and Clapham South Deep Level Bomb Shelter with TFL Museum’s Hidden London tours. Was the most incredible place to spend each day - I will never forget it!

  • @backachershomestead
    @backachershomestead 5 лет назад +4

    A very sad time in history! It is a shame that so much of this is not known and will be lost for good one day. Thank you to all that made this possible for us to see.

  • @nadnavlis240
    @nadnavlis240 4 года назад +17

    Excellent documentary that held my interest throughout the entire presentation.

    • @Bluediamond200
      @Bluediamond200 3 месяца назад

      I just love old abandoned places being explored

  • @plunder1956
    @plunder1956 3 года назад +3

    I have an odd connection with the cabinet war rooms. Because my mother Lorna Martin broadcast French folk music to the free french and resistance from there for the BBC. She couldn't be sure - but the microphone she used was probably also used by Winston for his radio speeches. He did use that room.

  • @magicwandfour
    @magicwandfour 4 года назад +6

    @ 19.46 you may be curious to know what you are looking at .It is part of the worlds first programmable computer (probably an early version or experiment) .For while the narration talks of Churchill it ignores that it was here at Dollis Hill that Tommy Flowers built the first computer. It was used to break the Lorenz cipher which Hitler used to issue orders to his high commanders and was more complicated than the Enigma machine. Flowers was the son of bricklayer from the East End faced opposition and prejudice from many at Bletchley Park, especially Gordon Welchman ( Marlborough and Trinity) . It was his expertise in using valves, gained from working on telephone exchanges, that gave him belief that it could be done. His computer ,named Colossus, came online just before D-day and a modern remake is now on show at Bletchley Park.

  • @csinspain
    @csinspain 8 лет назад +7

    I worked in the Paddock in the 1960's where it was used by the GPO Research Station. Some experiments that were sensitive to sound ad vibration were situated down there but I mostly remember it for the music club where you could borrow LP's and the motoring club where staff could hire specialist tools.

  • @jorgennorrman4023
    @jorgennorrman4023 3 года назад +3

    WOW !! Talk about deal breakers. This tunnels must have been really important on winning the war against Germany- GREAT Brittan

  • @michaeljamesmacaulay1689
    @michaeljamesmacaulay1689 3 года назад +5

    Excellent Production
    Thank you so much

  • @grantbeerling4396
    @grantbeerling4396 6 лет назад +4

    My Grandfather was a firman at night during the blitz, but we know during the day he worked on underground buildings during the war....we never found out any more, all he ever said was that he would've never wanted anybody to see what he saw during the blitz..a man of few words...he failed to get in the army due to flat feet....my other grandfather was a conscientious objector part of the Petts Wood set, he was a Pentecostal lay preacher as well as a local bricklayer.....
    Great Documentary....

  • @sarahhall738
    @sarahhall738 4 года назад +3

    Nan worked in the white cliffs of Dover on telephones then as ambulance driver in Canterbury during the Canterbury blitz then drove a Kent police superintendent around.

  • @Nounismisation
    @Nounismisation 10 лет назад +3

    This guy, the photographer, is committed to his thing. You can't fault that.

  • @grindupBaker
    @grindupBaker 5 лет назад +6

    I was born by East Acton station in 1946 and distinctly remember the train flying past Wood Lane in the late 1950s, between White City & Shepherds Bush.

  • @benwilson6145
    @benwilson6145 5 лет назад +5

    Impressed by the fact that there was no paper trail for the "hidden soldiers", how refreshing.

  • @daklakdigital3691
    @daklakdigital3691 2 года назад +2

    I worked for a government contractor who installed underground-located transmitters and receivers which had pop-up masts. These were all over the countryside.
    We serviced these underground chambers, which were located in fields, hills, etc., checking the electronics, and in some locations, generators and fuel tanks.
    My parents lived in the vicinity of several (spaced apart) and on one lengthy stay with them I visited a few of the sites. Some sites were pretty degraded but others were still fully functional - cobwebs included. A few of the pop-up antenna masts were manually operable.
    Then, after a months notice, these networks were abandoned "as is". Contractors employees were laid off but my employer, the contract holder continued on other projects, and eventually information and plans were destined for destruction. Many of us saved the cost of construction and kept them as mementoes at their homes.

  • @sadelsor
    @sadelsor 3 года назад +3

    Well done Chris, great work.

  • @sarahlee6641
    @sarahlee6641 8 лет назад +7

    I agree this is an interesting program. I like how they explored a cross-section of hidden places they used and made across Britain, not just London because of how widely the war affected countries.
    I don't know how many realise that even Manchester, adapted some pre-existing tunnels for air-raid shelters too. Most may not realise that there are more canals hidden under their feet in the city centre, although disused now- that was part of the reason during the war they were drained, so you could hide there if you had a bomb threat, in the hope that it and empty buildings could increase your chances of surviving.

  • @Scotland2306
    @Scotland2306 2 года назад +1

    People around the country must have been happy that London was protected.
    We’ve still got no bomb protection today.

  • @keith800
    @keith800 3 года назад +2

    The Post office railway is now open to the public as a museum called Mail rail and you can go for a trip on the trains.

  • @eutoday1049
    @eutoday1049 3 года назад +2

    This is fascinating indeed! I recognised many of the places in London, and had no idea what was below.

  • @wuffothewonderdog
    @wuffothewonderdog 3 года назад +3

    Further to the underground munition storage bunkers near Bath, in November 1944 4,000 tons of RAF bombs and other munitions exploded in the disused gypsum mines at Fauld, near Hanbury, Staffordshire. It left a crater 300 by 230 yards covering 12 acres. One farm vanished and three others were extensively damaged.
    I visited the site back in the 1980s. There crater had an eerie atmosphere and there was absolutely no birdsong, even though it was mid-summer.

    • @matthewcullen1298
      @matthewcullen1298 Год назад +2

      That's tragic so I hope it's not offensive when I say I could not help but feel a little fascinating if I saw that crater. I would assume it might be something to do with the war if I saw it and didn't know the story behind it. I lived in Guadalcanal for a while. There was so much WW2 items lying around. Could be a little dangerous when you decided to dig a hole.lots of unexploded ordinance was laying around like bullets grenades artillery projectiles and even the odd unexploded bomb. One lady found a Japanese bomb from a plane that was still very live under her outdoor stairs. She was just trying to grow a small garden. An eventful day by all accounts. Our mechanic was out plowing a field when he noticed he had a grenade Jammed between his plough blades I imagine Britian still has some hidden surprises

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 Год назад +2

    I have heard, from my grandfather, a member of British secret services, of an amazing operation to secretly store enough oil to maintain shipping throughout the war. One extensive tank, set in hills above Glasgow, is identified by Guiness Book of world records, as possessing the longest sustained echo. Where and how many were established is secret, but it must be enormous. I assume previous excavations might have been exploited. Chasing red spies until 1924, into China, being a cousin of the US ambassador, Joseph P Kennedy, my grandfather worked at a high level.

  • @rickautry2759
    @rickautry2759 7 лет назад +7

    Damn! All that telephone switching gear certainly wouldn't let anyone get any sleep down there!

  • @coralaune4006
    @coralaune4006 3 года назад +2

    Fascinating to watch - thank you

  • @cogidubnus1953
    @cogidubnus1953 8 лет назад +4

    This is a great video...thanks so much for posting it.

  • @ZollnerPiston
    @ZollnerPiston 6 лет назад +22

    One of the greatest things I have seen on youtube.

  • @papaalphamike
    @papaalphamike 6 лет назад +2

    Excellent programme. I didn't know how "much" was underground. My son would enjoy this . Thank you

  • @howardfortyfive9676
    @howardfortyfive9676 7 лет назад +9

    Very good presentation and quite lovely actually. I especially enjoyed the auxiliary guerilla forces spread throughout Great Britain, the munitions depots and the war materials factories. Splendid program.

  • @carolempluckrose4188
    @carolempluckrose4188 3 года назад +6

    I spent a short while on detachment to an underground radar station in the early '70's. It's long since gone now.

  • @jsbach9848
    @jsbach9848 4 года назад +4

    Why isn't this place made into a museum???? I would love to visit a place like this!

  • @fatblokes_ferguson
    @fatblokes_ferguson 2 года назад +2

    I started working at a print factory at cable depot in woolwich in 93, these buildings were used to store the reels of cables that were used to connect the uk with the US, but away from that, I used to get to work on the train from Homerton to north woolwich and because of the woolwich ferry was not yet started for the day I used to walk under the thames via the woolwich foot tunnel. I worked a long 15 hour day so that journey was not one I liked.

  • @joymaxfield7589
    @joymaxfield7589 3 года назад +1

    Very interesting ,so thank you for sharing ..

  • @whiteonggoy7009
    @whiteonggoy7009 3 года назад +4

    27:00 Dover castle,my dad would ride he's push bike from the castle underground, down under castle street to market square and hand deliver messages.

  • @thra5herxb12s
    @thra5herxb12s 3 года назад +3

    I have documented one of the last intact Zero station underground bunkers at Hollingbourne, such as shown at 37:06 in my Exploring Forgotten Places playlist if you are interested.

  • @JohnSmith-pd1fz
    @JohnSmith-pd1fz 10 лет назад +3

    Great Stuff! Verry Interesting. We had a 'Chain Home Command' HQ in woodland near where I grew up in Norfolk. Thanks for posting.

  • @essexalien7504
    @essexalien7504 3 года назад +3

    I seem to remember reading about a huge underground factory at the Longbridge Austin factory producing hawker hurricane engines and was still in use as the 1970's/80's for Austin car production . And still think the tunnels still exist but are probably sealed up now .

    • @luigicassaro2167
      @luigicassaro2167 3 года назад +1

      I remember seeing a video a while ago regarding the tunnels under Longbridge. There was quite a lot of parts in there.

  • @f16.striker.11
    @f16.striker.11 4 года назад +2

    A Wonderfull informative video on the wartime Secrets of Britain, I can fully understand the high secrecy of it all,
    My farther was in the RAF, a team of six men working under an army officer near the south coast of UK, no identification of rank was worn, all part of a decoy team, with almost 5 miles of land that from the air looked like Green farming fields near an airfield in daytime, but at night ... a busy shipping port, or an airfield, or may be a long military convoy, with Oil and Petrol open top tanks ready to be fired off if needed, and low power lighting arranged to look like ships / aircraft / lorries, with the lights being SLOWLY turned off in the event of an air raid, with hundreds of aircraft at the base, that could JUST be seen through the trees in daytime ... all made with wood and canvas by pinewood studios, this operation saved Southampton from thousands of bombs that was dropped at the decoy site by mistake, Just prior to the intended invasion of Great Britain there was some 400 fighter and heavy bombers near the south cost, all made if wood !!!!.

  • @capcompass9298
    @capcompass9298 6 лет назад +3

    In mid 2000, Paddock and other underground bunkers were to be opened to the public but everything was suddenly cancelled and entry money refunded. If a bunker hasn't got bunks, is it still a bunker?

  • @7griffinjack
    @7griffinjack 10 лет назад +3

    Fascinating! Although, surprising that there is no mention on Chislehurst Caves in SE London which were used to shelter people during air raids.

    • @yesmelud4846
      @yesmelud4846 10 лет назад +3

      i remember when you could stay all night there on your own, for a fiver, in 1978, not allowed now , fun police cunts............................

  • @24934637
    @24934637 3 месяца назад

    Brilliant upload, thank you! I'm from Stockport, and we've still got 3 sets of Air Raid Shelter tunnel systems carved into the soft 'New Red Sandstone' that the town in built on. One of them is partially open as a museum, the other two used to be open (unofficially) to 'Urban explorers', and the homeless community, but they've now been cemented closed sadly. Got a couple of vids of them on my channel for anyone interested.

  • @aquilarossa5191
    @aquilarossa5191 6 лет назад +4

    I would like to find a stash of cold war electronics surplus in one of those old bunkers. Mullard EL34, EL84, and ECC83 valves. Mustard capacitors and Mullard germanium transistors and diodes etc. Electric guitar stuff that is like gold and rare as hen's teeth these days as new old stock from that era.

    • @burthabard8316
      @burthabard8316 6 лет назад +1

      Ham radio rally's are good for that old I got hold of sum x Russian nite sites from the longleat rally for 10 pounds a set also lots of x army's navy's radio gear valves etc racial stuff

  • @306champion
    @306champion 6 лет назад +6

    I have seen many, many of these videos but none come even close to this one.

  • @lablackzed
    @lablackzed 3 года назад +8

    Still a lot of other site's that are huge but never seen by the public I know ex service man.👍

  • @davidwicks3334
    @davidwicks3334 3 года назад +3

    Brilliant video, thank you

  • @benisaten
    @benisaten 4 года назад +2

    Great series. Lots of amazing unknown secrets.

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 3 года назад +2

    Great video
    Use of tunnels central line Newbury park used as aircraft engine factory in ww2

  • @sputumtube
    @sputumtube 6 лет назад +3

    Really interesting documentary - thanks for posting.

  • @hermandadams
    @hermandadams 3 года назад +4

    the operatives in Winston's secret underground army were also tasked to target and eliminate top officials in each town or city working and cooperating with the invading Germans if they came, they knew it was a suicidal mission and as said life expectation was very short for these brave young people

  • @kollusion1
    @kollusion1 4 года назад +7

    High visibility jacket. - Access all area's!

    • @KumaBean
      @KumaBean 4 года назад +2

      Add a clipboard and a hardhat and you can walk into just about anywhere, lol

    • @plunder1956
      @plunder1956 3 года назад

      If you add a clip board and a tape measure you could probably visit Boris in No 10.

  • @stannousflouride8372
    @stannousflouride8372 6 лет назад +8

    RUclips PRO-TIP: In the suggested videos shown at the right, the ones you've already seen are underscored with a red line.

  • @SINTD_666
    @SINTD_666 3 года назад +2

    At 22:03 there is a spooky disembodied hand within the rungs of the ladder on the left.

  • @laurenbriggs112
    @laurenbriggs112 9 лет назад +5

    I am an Aussie Anglo sax son- but I love to see the deep underground unknown parts of the tube system. I really wish Australia had a better rail network - if that means going underground then in my book so be it.
    the size of the ammunition and other war bunkers is staggeringly huge- even for a farmer's son like myself. A great video.

    • @Mr-Damage
      @Mr-Damage 5 лет назад

      How are you going to get around a area the size of Brisbane for example going underground would be a 50 year project if you were to feed all the satellite cities that feed out of Brisbane but by the time your done it's obsolete.
      I reckon the tyranny of distance would be the biggest problem with underground tunnels in Australian cities.

  • @christianpatriot7439
    @christianpatriot7439 6 лет назад +2

    The world's first underground railway was in New York City. An above-ground train went into a belowground station through a tunnel. The tunnel wasn't but a block or 2 since the train was steam-powered and anything longer would have suffocated the passengers.

    • @terrymoore7293
      @terrymoore7293 6 лет назад +1

      The first underground railway was in London .Not in New York. Check it out for yourself, I believe it was called the Victoria Line in around the early 1880s.

  • @jaywalker3087
    @jaywalker3087 2 года назад +1

    I went down there in 1981 , brilliant atmosphere.

  • @ProducerCliff
    @ProducerCliff 10 лет назад +12

    This is a good documentary, certainly shows more than most of these types of "secret underground" documentaries. I remember the BBC had a "bunker studio" at Wood Norton. I lived in Germany years ago at a rented ex-WW2 Commandants house which had a tunnel from the cellar to an underground bunker in the garden that must have housed probably a dozen soldiers. Another tunnel leads off but the steel door had been welded shut, I always wanted to open it!

  • @PigSty1985
    @PigSty1985 9 лет назад +5

    Thanks for this great video! (:

  • @michaeldougfir9807
    @michaeldougfir9807 5 лет назад +2

    Wonderful! So many positive remarks.
    I had always thought it was the Germans who liked digging and tunneling. But this was hugely impressive! And so many places these men went, still had electricity! The dry preservation in many places was remarkable!
    The stalactites and stalagmites were a surprise, in a man made place.
    Anyway, very, very well done. Thank you!

    • @gailhandschuh1138
      @gailhandschuh1138 5 лет назад +1

      Michael Dougfir stlagtites are a result of water dripping. So , no great shock.

  • @Septic123
    @Septic123 3 года назад +2

    One of these just around the corner from me...sealed up but you can see the hatch

  • @lomgshorts3
    @lomgshorts3 3 года назад +2

    Where did all the .303 rifle ammo go? We could use it here in America no matter how old it is. The .455 Webley ammo, too.

  • @georgel74
    @georgel74 4 года назад +2

    I wonder did crossrail encounter these great tunnels and workshops??

  • @asd36f
    @asd36f 5 лет назад +1

    Fascinating program - I had no idea about the existence of the Mail Rail system.

    • @fraggit
      @fraggit 5 лет назад

      It's a tourist attraction now. This guy has a good video riding it ruclips.net/video/Dc7Aji3zsp4/видео.html

  • @pikeywyatt
    @pikeywyatt 6 лет назад +5

    and still no mention of the caves at Godstone caves near the M25. strange.

    • @AnthonyHigham6414001080
      @AnthonyHigham6414001080 3 года назад

      "Godstone Main Series - Moderate caving, mainly walking but with some stooping/crawling. GMS is a old stone mine from 17th century that may have seen use a World War I munitions store, World War II shelter and a mushroom farm."

  • @deltafoxtrot2
    @deltafoxtrot2 3 года назад +1

    very interesting, thanks for posting..

  • @TedBackus
    @TedBackus 4 года назад +2

    in 1940, the UK could build a massive installation underground with a level of discretion, in 2015 the UK cant build a damn subway above & below ground, with modern machine, & 20 billion dollars.

  • @NathanChisholm041
    @NathanChisholm041 4 года назад +2

    Mini trains that delivered the mail? Well there you go something I've never heard off.

  • @es-qc7lw
    @es-qc7lw 6 лет назад +3

    i met nick once and he does know a lot and nice guy

  • @snook1249
    @snook1249 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent documentary.

  • @sarahlee6641
    @sarahlee6641 6 лет назад +3

    In Manchester, the city centre's air-raid shelters were sometimes the underground canals- they were drained and reinforced with bricks before being used.

  • @garytucker8696
    @garytucker8696 3 года назад +4

    Makes you wonder if Jack the Ripper spent a penny there.

  • @nomiselnob69
    @nomiselnob69 10 лет назад +4

    I found this to be an amazing documentary as well. It was truly an amazing feat, especially building the tunnel under the Themes. Unfortunately under such dangerous conditions and may the men killed rest in peace. Facts such as Churchill's chair with his fingernail grooves dug in and the technology that was state of the art almost 75 years ago was intriguing. My question is not war related but does anyone know who's body was disrupted in the natural pool? There were two men in the mid 80's that attempted to stay the night for charity and one had his shoulder broken with no memory of it happening. I didn't catch the name of the person who's body was disrupted and tried several searches and couldn't find the answer. Thank you btw- for sharing!

  • @big23man
    @big23man 9 лет назад +5

    Really good, thanks

  • @misenplace8442
    @misenplace8442 5 лет назад +4

    I do have one question,
    What is an American 30.06 BAR doing in an auxiliary bunker ?

    • @howardwayne3974
      @howardwayne3974 4 года назад +1

      Auxiliary last ditch weapons for last ditch effort . unusual weapon with limited ammo means die in place .

  • @towgod7985
    @towgod7985 9 лет назад +8

    Awesome, Awesome, Awesome video!!

  • @lewiski1
    @lewiski1 3 года назад +1

    Shame they didn’t mention Tube Alloys or Hatters Castle both British World War 2 projects on Nuclear Weapons and Radar.

  • @maxasaurus3008
    @maxasaurus3008 2 года назад

    Damn impressive old boy, imagine the fright of that sentry had he moved mid-stream as it were.

  • @JohnMcMahon.
    @JohnMcMahon. 4 года назад

    That’s a Northern Ireland registered VW Passat (DJZ 6595), beside the Paddock bunker @21:12.

  • @adeladd7638
    @adeladd7638 3 года назад +2

    When I was a young lad in the 60s my Dad worked as an
    Air Traffic Control Officer at RAF Sopley. This was a wartime underground radar station and he took me there a few times. Access was down a very long slope which led to a dimly lit area where all the equipment was,back then low light was needed so that the 'blips' denoting aircraft could be seen on the CRT screens. The place still exists,a private company uses it for data storage,which probably means servers, maybe it is where this 'cloud' is....

  • @flyingrider3768
    @flyingrider3768 4 года назад +1

    You can understand why they would keep this from public eye the tunnels lead to different places including Buckingham palace and the parliament.

  • @RicTic66
    @RicTic66 7 лет назад +8

    The Germans would have certainly suffered from the activities of The Auxiliary units, very brave young men and women, but sadly so would have the local populations. The reason resistance forces in occupied Europe were so ineffectual was because of the revenge tactics employed by the Germans. For example the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich, in Czechoslovakia 1942 led to an estimated 13,000 arrested and interrogated; and an estimated 5,000 executed. In France even after D-Day the village of Oradour-sur-Glane in Haute-Vienne was destroyed, when 642 of its inhabitants, including women and children, were massacred by a Nazi Waffen-SS company. The cost/benefit analysis of these resistance raids quickly proved when dealing with an enemy so ruthless, the cost to innocent human life was not worth the odd propaganda victory. I am sure it would have been the same here.

    • @VK2DMH
      @VK2DMH 7 лет назад +5

      Does that mean everyone should just accept occupation (or even slavery) and do nothing? I hope not.

    • @RicTic66
      @RicTic66 7 лет назад +5

      No not at all, but would you assassinate a high ranking official knowing that a whole community would be annihilated following your actions? I personally as a patriot would like to think I would have made life as difficult as possible for the invader, but could not live knowing my actions had caused the deaths of women and kids. Luckily we English have only experienced occupation once in the last 1000 years, those who stood against William the bastard brought about the 'harrying of the north' which led to approximately 100,000 deaths, in a country of 2.5 million that was a genocide. I'm just glad we never had to find out in WW2.

    • @lordeden1475
      @lordeden1475 6 лет назад +1

      NO THEY WOULD NOT!
      These units were a piss poor joke!
      They had a life expectancy of about one day!
      Before being slaughtered!

    • @MrKen-wy5dk
      @MrKen-wy5dk 6 лет назад +3

      As an American, I agree with your logic. It's best to leave the formal military actions to the official military agencies. The British assassination plan of Heydrich was poorly thought out and the civilians who were killed should be a black blot on the British SOE record for all times,.

  • @CompetitiveAudio
    @CompetitiveAudio 9 лет назад +6

    Fixed that little previous hi-jack problem. To reiterate, I'm fascinated by cultures of many countries, including Europe. It's fascinating to see history displayed in an easy to understand format without attending a lecture. If there were more similar type programs originating from other countries we'd all benefit from the additional insight they would provide.

    • @CompetitiveAudio
      @CompetitiveAudio 9 лет назад +1

      +rendo I'm not much for random hate myself. Sad that so many seem to thrive on it. I had not realized my post had been hi-jacked since I'd made it many months ago. Thanks for the reply which notified me of the extent of damage. I had no idea that a positive could be turned so wrong. My apologies..

    • @CompetitiveAudio
      @CompetitiveAudio 9 лет назад +3

      +rendo You're correct, reading some comments is like peering into humanities darkest corners. My best to you and thank you again.

  • @michaeljamesmacaulay1689
    @michaeljamesmacaulay1689 3 года назад +4

    Could still be needed in the not too distant future ~ I am not pessimistic, just practical

    • @sebby324
      @sebby324 3 года назад +2

      Won’t withstand a nuke

    • @Freespeech141
      @Freespeech141 3 года назад

      @@sebby324 a nuke is still possible of course, but there are more insidious threats now,

  • @timengineman2nd714
    @timengineman2nd714 3 года назад +2

    My guess (repeat guess) is that if the information that such and such office is on the 29th floor, room 14 (or room 2914) was found out by the Nazis they would be looking for a tall building, not an underground location that was only 2 stories deep!

  • @Bluediamond200
    @Bluediamond200 3 месяца назад

    Interesting in about all the tunnels, even under our great building for the MPs and the pm , wonder if they’ve ever been down there.
    Love the little engine I can imagine it at work chugging away down there.

  • @oreilly1237878
    @oreilly1237878 5 лет назад +3

    Very very interesting. The Auxiliary units were trained up to S.A.S. standards.A last ditch super secret guerilla force to operate independently behind enemy lines if England was conquered partially or wholly.Another part were to be even more secret to operate as signallers with short wave radios reporting on enemy movements. Many after the invasion scare was over,round about 1942, were absorbed by special forces or special operations executive.they were the creme Dr la crème of Britain's fighting men.Hereward The Wake would have recognised them

  • @jclar3565
    @jclar3565 6 лет назад +2

    53:00 should be a narrator. Amazing voice and pleasing to American ears.

    • @eboracum2012
      @eboracum2012 3 года назад

      He sounds a lot like Guy de la chefboyardee from Time Team.

  • @TeeBee303
    @TeeBee303 6 лет назад +2

    Quite injoide this.... Thankyou

  • @droog1967
    @droog1967 9 лет назад +2

    The first photograph of the British Auxiliaries. Does anyone know the identity of the young man in the back row, third from the right ??
    Thank-you.
    When I was a young man 17 or 18 years old, I had an old WWII dagger similar to a F&S but significantly different. I now believe it to have been a British Auxiliary dagger.

  • @karlkuttup
    @karlkuttup Год назад

    as a kid in very early 1972 my best pals brother used to collect bits of ww11 stuff he dug up,on cannock chase and local sites that got bombed ,,at the back of a old bombed out factory site at the back he found a covered door way ,took him 5 days to dig it out and get in ,and what a find ,a set of 4 radios still inboxes a box of enfeilds 3 boxes of brens boxs of grenades stens other stuff all stored on metal rackes ,he called the police in ,he took photos of the find ,must have been a cash of weapons put there by local defence teams ,in 1939 /40 the factory made stens and enfield parts and other bits

  • @Bigbacon
    @Bigbacon 9 лет назад +5

    would love to be able to explore this kind of stuff.

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII 9 лет назад +1

      +zenuke This program is only scratching the surface. In the 80s I was helping remove old telecom kit from an underground place in Hampshire. The entrance was tiny but led to a 5 story shaft with staircase and a lift. Each level seemed to go on forever. It was apparently some kind of control centre but no one was saying much. Apparently the whole place was later left to flood.

    • @katiesaunders3424
      @katiesaunders3424 9 лет назад +1

      +Philip Jones where abouts in Hampshire? I know of a converted ROTOR bunker in Sopley sold on to a data company

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII 9 лет назад +1

      +katie salmon Somewhere in the New Forest is all I can recall. I was doing a short student placement exercise for my studies. We would turn up each morning, team up with one of the guys and spend a day. Didn't expect to learn much ( and we didn't ). Then one day I got taken to this place. The place was big though my role was just donkey work, taking out old kit. They were running pumps 24/24 to stop it flooding and said the pumps would be switched off when the clearing was complete. Dark when we finished that day so difficult to locate. I did try to find it again but without success. Between Ferndown and Southamption and in the forest is the best I can do.

    • @sputt100
      @sputt100 9 лет назад +1

      +Bigbacon go to jersey underground hospital go to coastal kent many tunles

  • @adamberndt4190
    @adamberndt4190 Год назад

    30:39 that mannequin looks like he just had the hardest day of his life.

  • @karpkatcher1070
    @karpkatcher1070 3 года назад

    Those who prefer to have their feet firmly on the ground, need to think again.

  • @rrplanb4030
    @rrplanb4030 7 лет назад +3

    Ironic that is there was a Nazi invasion of the UK then these units would have been called 'Terrorists' by them. =D

    • @KumaBean
      @KumaBean 4 года назад +1

      We were invaded and occupied by the Germans during WW2, in the Channel Islands.
      There are bunkers and fortifications all over the place here, search 'German underground hospital jersey' and 'Jersey bunkers', some of our big sea walls which people pass everyday without knowing are actually anti-tank defences.
      If you like history, this island is absolutely steeped in it.
      All the best to you and yours in these difficult times 🍻

  • @gregbolitho9775
    @gregbolitho9775 5 лет назад +4

    interesting, if they were in britain, how bout aus an new zealand, is it possible we have them here too? there are, i'm told, tunnels under ballarat, for munitions an stores, never found the entrance though, or anybody who knew about them.

  • @mcpinball1
    @mcpinball1 8 лет назад +8

    An Hour Of My Life...Well Spent !+)
    Merry Christmas 2016