Inside the room where the war was planned | Secrets of WWII
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- The Map Room at the Cabinet War Rooms was staffed day and night throughout the Second World War. It was here that some of the most important strategic decisions of the war were planned. It was in this room that Prime Minister Winston Churchill spent the entirety of D-Day. And only a handful of people even knew this room existed. What exactly went on in the top secret Map Room in the Cabinet War Rooms, who worked here, and why will some of these details will continue to remain a mystery to this day?
Book a private Behind the Glass tour at the Churchill War Rooms to see these rooms for yourself:
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My aunt, Miss Winifred Tindall , was one of secretaries that sat at the big table.
She had a seat on the plane to Canada should the worst happen .
Three parts of Operation Fortidude were named after the secretaries that took notes for Winnie.
It was a proud moment seeing her cavas and steel chair to the left of Winstons .
This was where my aunt “Did Her Bit “ .
Fabulous!
I'm sure you feel a massive amount of pride, I know I would.
That’s fantastic. She genuinely had a front-seat in history. I hope she discussed it with your family so her experiences were recorded.
Somehow this footage gives me a sense of the massive scale of the war. Maybe because of the huge maps. And a fascinating look into one of the main nerve centres of that war and how it operated.
Been there couple of years ago. It was an amazing museum to visit and know!!
These videos are great. There are places where you can tell history happened, and this is one of them. They don’t need multimedia experiences to spoon feed information, just some basic knowledge and a sense of imagination to visualise the momentous decisions made, and Churchill’s presence. Priceless.
Thanks for the historical video. Many forget about war rationing and the 3 sugar cubes for a weeks ration rings home. Happy to see WWII history being preserved.
jeez they would have loved to have google earth on a 70 inch screen down there
None of their advanced tech has been left on view, and even by today much of the advanced stuff remains advanced. I know but cannot explain.
Think about those private US satellite companies aiding Western governments with imaging of troop movements and mass graves. Imagine having that during ww2
An excellent walk through & explanation of what happened in the Map Room. Thank you.
Good video. Been there a couple times. Awesome to be able to see it. Well worth a visit.
brilliant...................enjoyed it emma
Badass and Cool Video.
Incredible! Thank you for this video.
Really interesting video!👍
Fantastic video. Thank you.
@8.00 I like the way he pronounced Philippines.
Such a great video!
I can thoroughly recommend as a must see.
Today there exists planning and control locations similar to these rooms, but with electronics even now you could not guess at. The intelligence here is the best in the world.
When you have to play RTS games but you and your homies didn't have PC.
"Big black box of technology"
LOL
There it was decided what should happen at Dunkirk. After the war, a BBC team visited General Montgomery "Monty" at his home for an interview. Among other things the reporter asked General Montgomery: "Monty, are you still contemplating that fabulous victory over Nazi Germany?" General Montgomery answered: No. Actually, no. What I am lately thinking about is that why was my mother so cruel to me during my school days?
Any mention of Bomber Command, with that lunatic toff front and centre of planning? No. Thought not. He was an angel, wasn't he...
Damn, not many people have watched this, this is incredible
One of my favourite museums
I have been there and it is small but very meaningful
The Pacific war was a American personal project, after Pearl Harbor with one War Room in Washington DC.
Nice to know that others were keeping track from the outside.
late reply but there was actually significant British (and Australian) involvement in the Pacific theatre as well
@@bumbyonline Not close to the scale of the US involvement .
The US was the only allied country Japan Physically attacked.
Even Germany never attack a US owed landmass.
Japan never touch Australian or UK propper . .
6:19 The pins on the map here are showing the Allied Zones of Occupation Germany and Austria.
Haha vacuum tubes still used in many places like America - how about the links between many British organisations in London, still today
My right ear enjoyed the intro
There are some old buildings in Canada with those pneumatic tubes, like the hospital I was born in. I doubt they are in use. Just too expensive to scrap I' guess.
Wonderful video & thank you for sharing it with everyone. 1 minor note 📝 please stop telling museum visitors that air-tubes are still common in America 😆
They are though aren't they?
Our bank used them up to a year ago for the drive thru lanes… Michigan 2021
Churchill wanted to be on the beaches and couldn't be
dissuaded, except the King said if you go I'll have to go and Churchill couldn't risk that.
How long should I spend there? One hour? Two hours hours?
Cannot even defend the most profitable colonies, Malaya & Singapore.
The russians did nearly all the fighting and lost most soldiers hence this room has relevance.
Lesson learned: If want to stay healthy, have no more than 3 cubes of sugar per week.
why border here radio normandy luffwafer squadron take off 100pound frenchfry
PAY DEBTS RIGHTNOW 2336
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27th of August, 1939. Germany invaded Poland 1st September, 1939. So ???
This room was useless for the most of WW2, as the British army was ideal for most of the war. Not RAF though.
Once the Russians won at Kursk in 1943 , the Russians were on a unstoppable march to Berlin even if D-Day never took place.
We could have just closed the war room and got out the popcorn and watched the rest.
and stopped the Arctic convoys.
You could have closed it in 1938. However, Major General Mathias Kräutler didn't surrender until 23 August 1945.
And allowed the Soviet Union to replace Nazism with Communism on the continent?
@@spidos1000 Stalin took all of Eastern Europe anyways after the war.
B-29 and A-bombs would have made sure Stalin took no more than allowed.
amusing. as if the UK was even relevant in WW2.
It was. It was an unsinkable aircraft carrier. Also a great staging area for the invasion of France. If no G.B., we would have had to stage in Africa and cross the Med. Or go through all of N Africa and north past Egypt.