AMERICAN COUPLE LEARN ABOUT THE 13 HOURS THAT SAVED BRITAIN
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- Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
- HEY GUYS WE ARE BACK WITH A HEAVILY REQUESTED VIDEO AMERICANS REACT TO THE 13 DAYS THAT SAVED BRITAIN, THIS WAS A CRUCIAL PART OF BRITISH HISTORY, AS WELL AS AMERICAN HISTORY, THESE 13 CRUCIAL HOURS WAS ONE OF THE TOP 10 IMPORTANT VICTORIES THAT CHANGE THE TIDE OF WORLD WAR 2. FOR ALOT OF AMERICANS THIS IS SOMETHING THAT A LOT OF AMERICANS DON'T REALIZE ABOUT WORLD WAR 2 AND IS HOW IMPORTANT IT WAS FOR THE ALLIED VICTORY. #HISTORY
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We are not getting paid for this video, but this was a video you guys ask us to make so we are not going to hold out on you guys over politics. ❤
I thought it was this video then when I read the title I thought oh it's a different video but it doesn't appear to be. Is the title wrong and it's hours not days.
@mattsmith5421 thanks for that, I have reposted this 6 times today I must of got messed up lol.
@@Trippingthroughadventures As a Brit. I think it is important to clarify that The Battle of Britain lasted for 3 and a half months, from 10 July to 31 October 1940. The title of the video is extremely misleading. Some people have taken it to mean that the Battle lasted only 13 hours. In fact it simply focuses on one particular day, 15 September 1940, to give an understanding of how intense the Battle became.
You DO get paid if you get enough hits !
@@HenriHattar normally yes but there’s some copy write issues using this video.
We may be a small nation but we are tenacious, never underestimate us!
What "small" nation are you talking about? In 1940 the British had an empire "upon which the Sun never set" and consisted of over half a billion people.
@@bearcatXF well this was about our tiny island was it not?
@@Shell2164 You think in WW2 Germany was only fighting the "tiny island" of Britain? Even in 1940?
@bearcatXF for the 13 hours in question was any other nation mentioned aside from France?
@@rogu3rooster Do you mean in this video - or in reality? See "Gassed up: The juice that fuelled victory in the Battle of Britain".
But that aside -
You're not going to tell me in 2024 that you're hearing for the first time about the existence of the British Empire are you?
.my father was a member of RAF fighter squadron 87 in the battle of Britain. Before he passed he told me some amazing stories. I asked him if he ever worried about being killed , he said no , I never thought I would die ! Indeed he survived through the war only getting malaria in North Africa. I picked up his torch and joined the Canadian Army in 1970 and served 13 years .
I will always be proud of my father's contributions during the war !
Thats amazing, i wish I could have met him, they were a different generation. I have met men from Arnhem and even the beaches on D Day but never spoken to the RAF men who saved the world.
@@user-ev1ub5es5m . My dad never considered himself a hero . He told me " oh no , it wasn't me , it was all those poor bastards on the ground " . He was a very humble guy .
@@user-ev1ub5es5m Those brave men saved Britain from an invasion. It's just sad that their legacy has been betrayed by politicians in the past few decades.
After the Battle of Britain our Prime Minister Churchill famously said "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few". You should also check out 'Jeremy Clarkson's the Greatest Raid of All' about the Commando attack on St Nazaire which was another key moment in the war, and a story of incredible courage and tenacity.
You beat me to it brawd, I was going to recommend that one too its a good one.
We will see but we got some copy write issues with this one.
Love you both from England🤗also check out Clarkson history of the Victoria cross.hated history at school as it was just repetitive,boring nonesense about learning every king & queen since 1500 just to pass a pointless exam😫but these videos make life as surprising to me as it does to you & it involved my grandparents!also check out anything by fred dibnah & guy martin.more historical legends that I wish we're my teachers🤗
@@Trippingthroughadventures you should be ok with the greatest raid and Clarkson's other documentary on the Victoria Cross as there are many reactions to it already. Both are excellent and worth checking out.
@@andrewcraw7117 There's a little twist at the end of story of the Victoria Cross. I'll let you watch it to see what it is.
Lots of the RAF fighter pilots weren't British. Hundreds of Poles, New Zealanders, Canadians, Czechs, Belgiums, Australians, South Africans, Free French, Irish (Republic). Americans and West Indian flyers helped out. The RAF Roll of Honour recognises that 574 pilots, from countries other than the UK, flew at least one authorized, operational sortie during the battle.
Yes, but most were British. The total number of pilots was over 2,000.
And only 7 were Americans..so they hardly carried that battle..🙄
@philb2085
Pilots who flew in the Battle of Britain, and the countries they were from.
Australia 32 Barbados 1, Belgium 28, Canada 112, Czechoslovakia 88, France 13, Ireland 10, Jamaica 1, Newfoundland 1, New Zealand 127, Rhodesia 3, South Africa 25, USA 9,
Poland 145, United Kingdom 2,342.
56 pilots in the Battle of Britain, were naval aviators, many in 804 Naval Air Squadron and 808 Naval Air Squadron.
The Polish pilots were enlisted into their own RAF Spitfire Squadron based at RAF Northolt. There is a memorial to the Polish pilots at RAF Northolt on the North Circular Road.
My grandmother had an American and a Canadian pilots stay with her when they were recuperating from injuries when they had been shot down. They were about 20 years old.
They discovered the cellar and bottles of homemade wine. They asked Gran about it and she said they could help themselves.
Soon they asked her if she could make more parsnip wine, which they had been selling as whiskey. Gran said she couldn’t as she hadn’t the sugar. A couple of days later there was a hundredweight of sugar on her doorstep!
This pair ran a black market for weeks until they went back to fight again.
what do you get when you put a canadian an american and a (assuming british?) woman together? the greatest black market scam ever lol
@@rileytruax766 legendary move.
My father was 6.5 years in the Navy on Atlantic and then Russian convoy duty. My mother never really saw him for all that time - my family lived near Biggin Hill aerodrome which was a major airfield in the Battle of Britain and subject to continuous German raids. One day my mother had just hung my sister’s nappies (diapers) on the washing line when she heard a plane she looked round and saw a plane roaring up the block - it was a Messerschmitt and he opened fire. Mum dived inside the house, and when she came out the nappies were riddled with bullet holes!! She was fuming as with rationing in force she couldn’t replace them! One day Lord Haw Haw gave out that my Dad’s ship (HMS Letitia) had been sunk by U boats. She assumed my dad was dead. About a week later there was a knock at the door and there was my dad - you can imagine her massive joy and relief!! In actual fact the ship had sunk but it had hit an iceberg outside Halifax Nova Scotia. He had a few days leave and then went back to war!!
I still ibe near biggin hill. Had Lancaster and 2 spitfires fly over my house. Must have been something else hearing and seeing those overhead everyday
Not sure why a pilot would strafe civilians?
Truly 'OUR GREATEST GENERATION '
Every day we give thanks for their service and selfless sacrifice..
#LestWeForget 🙇♂️🌺
Tim Leicester 🇬🇧
The current shower of politicians and their predecessors seem to have forgotten. Or maybe, it's worse than that. They actually want it to be invaded.
This video makes me weep with pride. The best word to describe the British spirit is stoic. We have stoicism in spades.
Or British ' sheer bloody-mindedness'.
There's not a race on the planet more stubborn than the British!
You don't. You're a proper snowflake.
That was then,this now.
I as a Swede weep with pride for your effort, by proxy
It makes you wonder why those brave men bothered though?
If they hadn’t won the Battle Of Britain ,the Allies would not have been able to use England as a platform to Prepare for DDay I TAKE MY HAT OFF TO THE PILOTS AND ALL CONCERNED AS WITHOUT THEM THE WORLD WOULD NOT BE FREE FOR US ALL TO ENJOY 😔😔🤷♀️
@@rosaliegolding5549 Well they might not have been in such an impossible situation. Apparently it was war gamed and the result was that, with the RAF the invasion of Britain is still unsuccessful.
13 hours that saved Britain is mythical nonsense! The luftwaffe was never going to beat the RAF! The British for starters, were producing more aircraft than they were losing! And Britain was never in danger of being invaded, the Germans never had the capability to do so!
The Royal Navy has disappeared you know then you take into account Germam equipment and resources it was impossible they wouldn't have succeeded.
@@samuel10125 waiting for the motley assorted invasion vessels to invade was the Roal Navy with 80 to a 100 fast destroyers 3 battkeships ect that would have reeked havoc with those slow moving river barges and slow tugboat packed with sea sick soldiers and panicking horses. No contest.
@anthonyeaton5153 exactly granted that's hindsight for you our older generations would have had no way of knowing that be even then it would have been suicidal to even attempt to invade the UK.
As a country, we survived but not without the help of so many nations who joined in the battles of WW2. To whom we owe a debt of gratitude and respect. Thank you to all who serve their countries.
Those countries were also fighting for themselves. Had Germany won Hitler would not have been kind to them.
We survived ALONE. NO other country between July 1940 and April 1941 was threatened with bombing, invasion and naval blockade.
If you want to correctly argue that Britain was supplied by its empire and the US then remember to add that nazi Germany was also supplied by its OWN empire of its recent European conquests (including some of the most heavily industrialised nations on the planet), as well as MILLIONS of tons of food, fuel and raw materials from their "best friend forever" the USSR (well, at least until 22nd June 1941), as well as being supplied from neutral Spain, Finland, Sweden & the Balkan countries... oh and not forgetting that the US also supplied HUGE amounts of raw and finished materials to the nazis AS WELL as it did to the British, being a neutral profiteering bystander as it was until Dec 1941!!!
In 1940 Britain saved itself INSPITE of the US as much as it did BECAUSE of the US. That truth is directed at the US Govt and corporations. As for ordinary US citizens, we loved you then and still do.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684Some excellent and very valid points here! We had help from many quarters in bringing WWll to an end but we stood alone and endured heavy losses for many hard months in the earlier stages of the war.
As for the USA, State papers released in recent years show that they were considering starting a war with Britain as late as the early 1930s because they wanted to annexe Canada to exploit its natural resources and they still held residual antipathy towards "the old country" from Civil War days. No wonder they were busy profiting off both sides of the European war - until Japan attacked Pearl Harbour and teamed up with Hitler's Germany. Only then did their priorities really change.
@@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 "We survived ALONE" If you're British then "you" asked for the war. "You" declared it on Germany not the other way around.
"NO other country between July 1940 and April 1941 was threatened with bombing, invasion and naval blockade." Well, except for the country you declared war on... and later upon its allies including Finland for simply defending itself against Soviet aggression.
"If you want to correctly argue " Yeah, because Germany got so much "food, fuel and raw materials" from "heavily industrialized Finland and the Balkans"... Well, nothing from the Balkans until at least after American Lend-Lease had already been passed and put in effect. [March '41, ya know.] And little Finland fighting first the Winter and then the Continuation Wars was actually importing food - not shipping it out. Sweden did supply Germany with both raw and manufactured product and materials but not food as they themselves were under wartime rationing due to blockade by..."you", actually.
You can read all about this at Wiki. Look up "Sweden during WWII". There we also read "the Swedish government was not convinced that the British could protect them and opted to continue exports [to Germany]. The iron ore [Sweden exported to Germany] provided much needed gold bullion, food and coal from Germany". So if Sweden's getting food and coal from Germany then you can figure that Germany isn't getting that stuff from Sweden, right? The USSR is out of the picture in June '41 - but that as well is after Lend-Lease came into effect.
"
oh and not forgetting" Hmm. Can you cite your sources for saying "the US also supplied HUGE amounts of raw and finished materials to the nazis AS WELL as it did to the British, being a neutral profiteering bystander as it was until Dec 1941!!!" ? Because I'm trying to square that claim with the fact that in 1940 the US supplied critical 100 octane fuel as early as the Battle of Britain. See "Gassed up: The juice that fuelled victory in the Battle of Britain".
"In 1940 Britain saved itself INSPITE of" Nope. See above.
@@bearcatXF "Britain declared war on Germany"..... As I explained to you on another of your utterly clueless comments, you're the type of idiot who when a passer by intervenes to stop a serial rapist from attacking his next victim then calls the "good Samaritan" the "aggressor".
"Can you cite your sources"? Do you mean in the same way as you have? I.E completely failed to back up any of your nonsense with ANY sources whatsover? (Mind you, anything you cite would probably come from some David Irving BS or some other neo-nazi cockwash such as "Europa the last battle".
I like the FULL story, not just the US centric "edited highlights". Read on.
If the US had REALLY wanted to "help Britain" in its "hour of need", then instead of bleeding the British empire dry and causing its collapse, they could have for example sold a production license for Tetra Ethyl Lead (or TEL - The compound required for the production of hi-octane fuels) to Britain when we applied to purchase one from the "Standard Oil of Jersey City Company" prewar.... Instead they & the US Govt refused to sell one to "their British cousins"... So much for the nonsense idea of a "special relationship" between the UK & US.
Standard Oil and the US Govt however had absolutely NO qualms though about providing the exact same licence to the nazis when they applied to purchase one in 1938. But when it came to Britain the US preferred to strip the British of ALL their gold, cutting edge technology and military bases around the world during the British "hour of need" in return for a supply of amongst other things, US produced hi-octane fuel.
Where there nazi sympathies in the Standard Oil boardroom and in some parts of the US Govt? The truth is so unsavoury were the business practices of the US "Standard Oil" company (such as seeking furtive routes and brokering shady deals to supply nazi Germany with fuel and oil via third party nations during the war) that it's activities were investigated and closely monitored by the US Govt... but only AFTER the they had been DRAGGED into WW2 in Dec 1941 by the German declaration of war on the US!!!
The US "business community" engaged in VERY profitable business dealings with BOTH sides throughout WW2. US corporations such as Ford, General Motors, US Standard Oil, IBM, Kodak, Chase Bank, Coke-Cola (to name but a few) carried on "business as usual" with nazi Germany THROUGHOUT WW2.
Ford's auto production facility in Cologne and General Motor's Opel subsiduary plant in Berlin were both busy working 24/7 THROUGHOUT WW2 furnishing the nazis with approximately 60% of the Wehrmacht's military transportation needs, as well as a sizeable chunk of the Luftwaffe's aero engine requirements... all the better for attacking Britain with eh, and all the while providing US companies with BILLIONS of dollars in profit, and the US govt with millions of dollars of tax revenue
The "ALuminum COrporation of America" (ALCOA) for instance supplied SO much aircraft grade aluminium to nazi Germany in the late 1930s and into the early 1940s that it actually caused shortfalls within the US government's own military aircraft production schedules during the same period, so much so that in June 1941 the situation prompted Harold Ickes, US Secretary of the Interior, to go on record as saying “If America loses this coming war, it can thank the Aluminum Corporation of America”.
With "friends" like the US business community who needs enemies?
As I said above Britain saved itself INSPITE of the US as much as it did BECAUSE of the US. See above.
Rest assured, the US adminstration saw oversaw the death of the British Empire while we fought ALONE for 10 months to maintain the flame of democracy in Europe, thereby saving idiot US isolationists from the nightmare of being sandwiched between a nazi dominated Europe and a Japanese dominated Asia. The US paled her hand excellently by spreading her hegemony into Europe post WW2, but she did so at the cost of MILLIONS of EUROPEAN lives. Give over with your "the US saved us" BS.
Now go and polish your "GI Joe sixshooters" little one.
the young boys on the ground aged 16 reliving their stories were only about 3 yrs younger than some of the pilots they were watching,defending our country....
Fact.
A different generation made of sterner stuff,god bless them all.
OUR WRAF GIRLS WERE IN THE THICK OF IT TOO. BLESS'UM.
Broken keyboard?
@@sandgrownun66
There could be a person behind those cap locks whose vision is impaired. I myself had severe cataracts for five years which impacted my vision until I was able to have corrective surgeries last year. Try to not be so eager to judge without knowing the possible circumstances for your criticisms.
@@brigidsingleton1596 I don't want to judge first. So I ask about something which won't be the case. Also, I frequently enquire if there is a reason for it. Or do they just think what they write is more important than everyone else.
When you hear Rolls Royce Merlin engines flying overhead, it's like nothing else you've ever heard. Some years back (about 15 or more) my wife and I were visiting her brother. We were in the garden and suddenly there was this rhythmic humming throbbing noise. "what's that noise" said the brother in law. "That" I said smugly "is the sound of Rolls Royce Merlins." We looked up, and flying overhead was a Spitfire and a Hurricane, both either side of a Lancaster Bomber. So 6 Merlins in total. Obviously going to or coming from an air show somewhere.
@@baylessnow
I had that recently in the countryside near RAF Cosford the day before the airshow. Out practicing I guess.
I stopped what I was doing and just watched and listened to it 👍🇬🇧
@@beefsuprem0241 It's a brilliant sound isn't it?
The "BBMF" or "Battle of Britain Memorial Flight". MARRRRRRRRRRVELLOUS !!!!
Jesus wept! An internal combustion engine, is an internal combustion engine!! If the sound of one makes you orgasmic, you need help bud!!
The Spanish (Hispano) BF109 fighters also used merlin engines.
My Mothers house got hit but the strange thing was the front had gone but the back still stood and the gas supply was intact! So she cooked the last of her rations and invited some old neighbours in to share the meal- they all then had to find somewhere to live- this was in Liverpool 🏴
Unbreakable spirit. Makes me proud. Much like the people of Coventry who immediately rallied after the devastating attack.
The actor Sir Michael Caine was an evacuee from London as a child. A few in there, such as Tony Benn (a Labour politician) and Nicholas Parsons (tv presenter) also grew up to be very successful! Not forgetting Dane Vera Lynn who was the forces sweetheart and very famous singer, with wartime classics such as “The White Cliffs of Dover”.
Bomb damage can still be seen on many London landmarks and buildings, such as damage around the entrance to the Victoria and Albert museum and also all around the base of Cleopatras Needle along the River Thames.
A special mention must also go to our Polish friends. At least two Spitfire squadrons were made up of Polish pilots who were displaced after Germanys occupation of Poland. The Polish fighter pilots flying for the RAF were renowned for their excellent airmanship. Britain and Poland have a long friendship and we were lucky to have them fighting with us.
My father served in the RAF from 1938-46. His younger brother joined the parachute regiment, and both my grandfather were wounded in WW1. Very humbled, and proud of them.
My great grandads were in the black watch in ww1, grandad was in merchant navy in ww2, torpedoed a couple of times then joined the army so he could shoot back. They fought against what England embraces now, sad times
Thank you for there service. a lot of my family and extended family were killed in the WW1 and WW2, I'll always remember the ones i got to know.
As am I !
You should watch the movie The Battle of Britain. Just a thought
There were actually FIVE more years of fighting for us from the Battle of Britain in 1940 to 1945. Six years in all for us.
If you watch to the end of the video they actually say that in the video itself. No it wasn't the end of the war but it doesn't take away from the fact that this was an event within the period of the blitz that changed Hitler's mind about invading Britain. It's not the only defining moment of the war but it was definitely one of them.
@@Loulizabeth Yes, the video that they were reacting to said, incorrectly, " ... four more years ..." at 56:46
Us? andypandy Us? You weren’t even born!!
@@DerekLangdon
If Americans can say "we" won the Revolutionary War then I can say that "we" won World War II. In fact two of the relatives that I was brought up with in the 1950s and 1960s actually fought in that wall so given that they were close family members (Uncles) then yes: "we".
OK?
@@DerekLangdon hes still a citizen of that country lol so yes hes a loud to say "us" i would even accept the use of the word if he wasn't becuase it can be used to talk about the allies in general.
Thanks for persevering with this one - I know it was hard work, but looks to be worth it.
Hopefully now you understand how amazing it is that we still have so many historical building left in places like London, and also where our sense of humour was honed to the understated, dry place it is today! Respect to all the people who served during the war, and to all those at home who 'Kept Calm and Carried On'.
My mother was born and raised in the city of Manchester during WW2. Manchester in those days was an inland port, and therefore was a target for the Germans. At that time, she was a teenager and she vividly recalls seeing the German planes escaping from the RAF. After dropping their bombs on the docks, they would fly at roof top level to escape the RAF fighters, and because they were so low, she could see the crew. They did this because they knew that the fighters would not shoot at them over areas of housing in case the stray cannon bullets hit civilians.
My dad and mum both were children when ww2 started. They both saw horrible things here in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Jews being dragged out their houses, afraid, mum being shot in a train by allied planes. And the famine they both experienced in the last winter of the war in 1945. My father was in such a bad state , he was send to Switzerland to live with a swiss family to get some weight and health. Thousands of Dutch children were send there after the war.
There’s a movie called “The Battle of Britain”. It has big stars in it. Michael Caine Laurence Olivier Robert Shaw. It is about this time. It’s a great watch. Some of the footage from this documentary would have come from this movie.
it has come from the movie.
This film portrays only one day in the battle of Britain. In fact, it lasted for over three months,
10 July - 31 October 1940
Yep,15th Sept saw the most enemy contacts. It was intermittent for the time you say. It depended most of all on the weather. Other days saw up to 1000 aircraft in the sky. As you say it wasn’t one day.
The reason why America didn't join in the war sooner was wholly political and profit based. The vast majority of Americans didn't want to get involved in another war, not so soon after WWI. Plus the US was making huge amounts of money from Britain buying Aid and Weapons. In fact, we didn't finish paying off our debt to America and Canada until 2006.
@@LS-mx1ge the UK was the world's superpower, we had the biggest and best navy, we still had our empire with military bases that are now mainly under American control. The US wanted us taken down a few pegs, for some reason they thought he would want America back, they feared that we would use Canada to invade. Everything that happened after the way with the UK and the empire was pushed by the American government.
@@solatiumz Darn those American upstarts!
@@LS-mx1ge I wonder how Churchill would go about "avoiding" the war considering he was so enthusiastic in carrying it out. And by that I mean his targeting of German cities up (almost) to the very end. Yes I know all about Bomber Harris.
> If domestic factors have any bearing on the outbreak of war in September 1939 they are to be found in the response of the British and French Empires to the decline in their relative international strength and the cost and political difficulties of reversing this trend. For Britain in particular it soon became obvious that a sustained rearmament and increased government spending would produce crisis in the balance of payments, a decline in exports, more imports, a threat to the currency, labour difficulties and so on. By 1939 a Treasury official warned that Britain was sailing economically "upon uncharted waters to an unknown destination" [source: Shay, "British Rearmament in the Thirties", Princeton 1977, p.276]. If Hitler were to be confronted militarily, while Britain and France maintained economic stability and domestic political peace, then 1939 was in some respects the best time to do so. Allied rearmament was planned to peak in 1939/40, while the advantage of using up unemployed resources and avoiding inflation was not expected to last beyond the winter of 1939. Oliver Stanley, President of the Board of trade, concluded that "there would come a time which, on balance of our financial strength and our strength in armaments, was the best time for war to break out" [source: ibid, p.280].
Neither Britain nor France was prepared to accept an end to its imperial power and world influence, though neither could really afford the military effort of defending it. Caught between these two pressures, but reasonably confident of the brittle nature of the Nazi regime, they opted for war. [source: Peden, "A Matter of Timing: The Economic Background to British Foreign Policy 1937-1939", in History, lxix, 1984, pp. 15-28; P. Kennedy, "The Realities behind Diplomacy", London 1981, pp. 301-16]. By June 1940 France was defeated and in political turmoil. By December 1940 Britain was almost bankrupt, entirely dependent on American finance and war production to keep going. The economy and political system of the Third Reich was only brought to collapse by the combined efforts of America, Russia and Britain after four years of total war. <
- Richard Overy
@@solatiumz This is true but i think it relates more to WW1 than 2. The US was more than happy to see the Europeans powers tear themselves apart, its own attempts at Empire had not been so successful due to them.
Seeing, specifically the British, losing their power over the Empire was something they saw as a good thing, i always got the feeling they were sitting and biding their time during the first World War, to see which way it went, to see how they could profit both financially and politically from it. There was still no love lost between the US and UK at this time, they only entered at the bequest of the French.
By the time WW2 came around our Empire was crumbling, unable to fully recover after the disaster of WW1, independence had already been achieved by the English speaking colonies and much of the rest was in revolt. The US entered because they eventually had no choice, the war came to them in the form of Pearl Harbour, they didn't do it so save us and went out of there way after to negate British power and influence.
@@waldorfmcvitty4854 Absolutely. The US should've just stayed out of WW1. Theoretically then there'd never have been a second war because no Treaty of Versailles, no Bolshevik Revolution, no Hitler, and so on. It's Pearl _Harbor_ btw.
if you can find it Watch the Film BATTLE OF BRITAIN Great Film.
most of it was in their video
I posted on your blitz video. I grew up hearing my parents talk about their wartime experience. They were both 8 yrs old when war broke out. They lived in kent and they too described it at first as fun at first. I have so many stories i could fill a small book! The war is something that one of us can ever forget although not sure as time passes whether the latest generation feels the same. But the effect on british culture and society was perhaps changed forever. We feel strongly about standing up to bullies and agression and perhaps that is why as a nation we are unwavering in our support for the people of ukraine. I applaud your willingness to learn of our struggle and your thoughtfulness ❤
Of the 2,962 allied pilots engaged in the Battle of Britain, 2,421 were RAF (and Fleet Air Arm), 117 were Canadian, 141 were Polish 11 American and a further 200 were from ten other countries. 515 of them including 29 Canadians were killed.
I thought I'd create a simple "visual aid" in order to assist people learning about the history of the battle of Britain. There is much ongoing debate about the nationalities and proportions of RAF fighter pilots who took part in the battle, with occasionally a furtive aspect which attempts to portray the battle as a victory of "mostly foreign pilots". Below is a graphical representation of the proportion of pilot nationalities serving within RAF Fighter Command during the summer of 1940.
Each flag is roughly equivalent to 30 pilots, The numbers after each nation are the ACTUAL number of aircrew from that country, and the approximate percentage of RAF Fighter Command's establishment in the summer of 1940 that they represented.
The figures are taken from the RAF records of the awards of the highly coveted "Battle of Britain clasp" to the British 1939-45 Campaign Star. Which was scrupulously ONLY awarded to RAF & Fleet Air Arm aircrew who flew at least one active sortie in the UK in any RAF fighter aircraft between 10th July 1940 and 31st Oct 1940.
🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧 UK (2342) (80%)
🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱 Poland (145) (5%)
🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿 New Zealand (127) (4%)
🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦 Canada (112) (4%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿 Czechoslovakia (88) (3%)
🇦🇺 Australia (32) (1%)
🇧🇪 Belgium (28) (1%)
🇿🇦 S. Africa (25) (1%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇺🇳 Other nations (France (13), R o Ireland (10), USA (9), Rhodesia (3), Newfoundland (1), Jamaica (1), Barbados (1)) (1%)
(And just to preempt any wandering idiot lefty "Identity warriors" from protesting about "The lack of credit given to the black pilots who fought in the battle of Britain"... the pilots from South Africa, Rhodesia & the Caribbean were all of white descent).
Hi guys , Dame Vera Lynn was a famous singer who became the forces sweetheart , touring all over the world during the war . In a poll she was voted the no.1 singer by US forces as well , quite an achievement. She died a few years ago at 103 . 🇬🇧
My great aunt worked at the Supermarine Works in Southampton where the Spitfires were made.
She was there when the Luftwaffe bombed it. That was definitely something that stayed with her for her entire life.
Thank you for your understanding and comments, I was born after the war in 1953 but my parents both served.
My Mother served from 1940 to 1946 and was on RADAR as an operator and served in 'Hell's Corner' in Kent, Dover and Wick in northeast Scotland. She was one of the RADAR Operators supporting 617 Sqn when they were dropping tin foil over the English Channel to simulate a battle fleet and invasion going to Calais while the real invasion was going in to Normandy. She was Mentioned in Dispatches for her work.
My Father was in Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) and served from 1940 to 1952 starting in the UK, then North Africa, Malta, Scicilly (sp?), Italy, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany and then over to Palestine and the emerging country of Israel before returning to England to be a trainer.
Naturally I served, when I was old enough, during the 1970s and, to us then, the very real threat of nuclear war was upon us. 1971 to 1983 with the Queen's Royal Irish Hussars on Chieftain tanks and spent most of that time on the North German Plain looking at the Russians who were looking at us.
Now, we are all looking at each other and wondering who is going to blink first - we are very close to a world war now and I hope the money men and the politicians back off.
This is a very measured and thoughtful response. Many thanks.
So sad but so lucky, you just never know.... 🍀♥️
It was wonderful to watch this with you. As an ex-Army Officer it humbles me if someone thanks me for my service, but these people were real heroes, from age 6 to 80. It's uplifting when people from other countries appreciate this. We have been in the military as a family since the Crimean War at least but my father was pulled from the rubble as a baby with my young gran at the Clydebank Blitz (near Glasgow) with only his Uncle and Cousin as victims. I don't know if you visited the Imperial War Museum but their names are recorded there.
My mother was 6 years old at this time, her family lived between Southampton and Portsmouth and she saw a lot of bombing over the war and was on one occasion straffed by a German fighter, she was the youngest of 10 children and her 5 brothers all fought during the war and all survived, now at 90 years of age she is the last of them alive.
You should also checkout an old american movie called 'know your ally britian' Its clearly army propaganda from back in the day but its an american movie that does a good job representing the british spirit well imo and explaining many things about the uk in ww2 that americans probably wouldnt know. People often forget too that the north of scotland was affected as well as northern ireland, the belfast blitz was hugely damaging and many buildings that were bombed out are shells of their former selves to this day. Something to note too even my grandparents/great granprents never ever talked about death in particular, people just were gone due to the war, like they moved away or something and overtime you sort of realise and understand that kids back then just didnt understand all the death they saw and carried these feelings through the rest of their lives. It makes me so thankful that because of their sacrifise me and or my children wont have to experience what they did.
Convoys to Russia gathered in Loch Ewe and were able to take on fuel before they left together.
My grandmothers was 18, living in Sittingbourne, Kent when this happened, she had already lost a husband, married at 17. She told me that quite often downed fighters, British or German would hit the ground so fast, there'd just be a crater, quite a lot of those planes are still there. If a plane crash was above ground, they'd take trophies. The things that woman saw were incredible, I have nothing but respect for that generation.
My family home, was in Kenley, Surrey. Kenley was one of the frontline fighter base protecting London. I think it was one of the first fighter bases attacked in the Battle of Britain.
Great video!
My father told me that his dad was unfortunate enough to tell the wrong joke to the wrong person about the battle of Britain.
So I am from Denmark, and Denmark was under German occupation during the fall of 1940, and sometimes they could hear the bombing in Denmark and the huge bomber wings humming in the horizon.
The town I was born in has a lot of historical significance, and a Viking burial site was freshly discovered, and my grandpa was a machinist during that archaeological dig. Suddenly, SS officials turned up and were disappointed with the state of the burial site and complained, "What kind of crap Himmler wanted them to take pictures of?"
My grandpa answered, "The kind of crap the vikings sailed to England in and stayed there for 200 years... Sir." That was perfectly timed and cost him 40 days in the big house.
Keep calm and carry on.We did🇬🇧
That’s a myth! It’s nothing but propaganda! If you think people who lost their homes, or love ones, kept calm, and carried on as normal. Then you are deluded! It devastated the lives of people!!!
The garden that you mentioned, is the county of Kent in South East England. The county, which is a large county, is still known as "The Garden Of England" today. It's basically because a huge variety of things are grown there. It's also very picturesque, just like a country garden in England...
It was more than just 57 nights,of raids,we had raids throughout the war,and in 1944 the flying bombs started,and then the V2;s,which went on well into 1945,I can remember it very well.
Why are people using the royal we, when they weren’t even born then?
@@DerekLangdon Pathetic comment
@@DerekLangdon She said she remembers it. Show some respect.
It was actually 57 consecutive nights in 40/41.
Jimmy Perry along with David Croft came up with Dad’s Army, Are You Being Served?, It Ain’t Half Hot Mum, Hi de Hi, You Rang My Lord and Oh Dr Beeching. The place you see with the bloke is today a museum in Uxembourg during WW2 Winston Churchill was Prime Minister and he asks a question about if there was any spare aircraft he is told there is no spare aircraft, watch Battle of Britain film it shows the museum. Battle of Britain film footage is shown in this film. Nicolas Parsons late tv personality. Dame Vera Lynn singer died a few years ago. Jimmy Perry Dad’s Army writer died a few years ago.
Arthur White's little brother David will grow up and become Del boy in "Only Fools and Horses ". AKA David Jason. He and Arthur became great actors, they were both in the detective series " Frost "
A great show 👏 😂❤.
Wow that blew my mind, I just ran into to Tiffany to show her, now we got to check out frost thank you 😊
@@Trippingthroughadventures enjoy 😉 😘 😊
And both in the darling buds of May another fantastic tv show
The organisation involved was extraordinary. It seems as everyone kept their cool and did their job. Marvellous.
The polish army fought with cavalry during ww2 and the first few days they were effective against the germans, my gran is polish and grew up at the start of the war so i get told lots of stories that you dont normally hear
The Polish squadron took many years to be given recognition. They were initially treated very badly and not taken seriously. When they were finally allowed to go into action, they became the most effective fighter squadron in the RAF. ruclips.net/video/ptijNcDanVw/видео.htmlsi=DawmmhdNKMsZdWQ8
@@adrianmcgrath1984Polish 303 Squadron RAF had the most kills of the Battle of Britain.
You would enjoy watching "Know your Ally" very very interesting
Engine note is easily identifiable when you're hearing them every day. Some years ago I worked as a motorcycle dispatch rider in London. It got so that I could tell the make of the bike coming up behind me from the engine note. I belive soldiers can do the same with the sounds of gunshots. They can tell if the gunfire is theirs or the enemies.
I remember my mum telling me that whilst my grandfather & their 4 sons fought in WW2 my mum & her young brother were evacuated. My grandmother was a women not to be messed with & fearing invasion she had a cricket bat behind the front door & told my mum “they may get me but with luck I’ll take some of those b***t**ds with me”. The younger brother came home from evacuation early & was killed by by a V2 a few weeks later.
Big shoutout to those tough as old boots women getting it done
Your comment about knowing the sounds of the engines. My parents were children during the war. We were at the beach and the Memorial Flight were at an air display. As the planes were coming towards us my Dad said to my mum. "It's alright Sally they're ours". A few minutes later a Spitfire a Lancaster bomber and a Hurricane flew over head.
My mother could still name all the aircraft in her 80s. We lived a few miles from an airport that held a display every year and she was telling my children how she had been taught to recognise the silhouette and sound of each type of plane
That phrase, "it's alright they're ours" is memorable.
My mom was evacuated from Birmingham to Hereford. Birmingham was bombed but the censors only allowed the press to report " a town in the Midlands has been bombed". Because our industry was so important they didn't want to name our city in case it effected morale.
So was my Mom, from Birmingham , she was evacuated
If you havent already seen it, check out the tomb of the unknown soldier. It was after WW1, 1922, when it was decided that an unknown soldier was removed from his grave in France and brought to London to be interred in Westminster Cathedral in memory of all killed in WW1, and whose names werent known. Its a good programme to watch.
Thank you for a superb Vlog, My grandmother was bombed out twice in East London though never harmed physically by the bombing the terror was far too much for her to bear, and she never recovered and she past away in a sanatorium at the end of the war. This was one of the factors I wanted to join the RAF but I was raised by my other grandmother after my father was killed in action in the Korean war 1951 and she would not agree for me join. When I was 21 I joined the RAF the 12 years in the service was the making of me.
That’s the truth! All this, they kept calm, and carried on nonsense is sickening!
Years ago iwas on holiday my mother and I were looking around a Arts and Crafts building. We were in the end room which looked over Lake Windermere, which is very long but there in a valley at 90` opposite. 2 Spitfires came down the mere and banked infront of us and went down the valley. It was amazing they sound different and move differently, they make us proud.
About 2000 in Wainuiomata, Wellington and my elderly parents from Christchurch were sleeping in my spare bedroom on a visit. They got married in 1938 in England, and went through the war in the UK. Our local semi-volunteer fire brigade siren went off in the night and I turned over and went back to sleep. the next morning, my Mom said to me......when I heard the siren, I half-woke up and started listening for the sound of the German bomebers coming.... That REALLY brought 1940 -43 in England home to me!! 🙂
Thank you for highlighting such an important part of British history
thanks for showing this and reminding us what was done in those far off days , my uncle joined the RAF aged 19 he died a few years back and was always thankful to the USA for coming in and helping us defeat the NAZI's in WW2. His wife was Scottish and in the Royal Navy. she did secret work and would never talk about it. thank you once again.
I will always remember a story my Gran told me about being bombed, she was born before WW1 and so was bombed by a Zeppelin when a child and in WW2 she was bombed in the Blitz.
I have grave doubts that the current generation would react in the same way as these brave lads.
You are quite right!! The once progressive, but now gullible working class have adopted fascism as their creed!!
You only have to see what's happening in Ukraine to put this into our own world view.
As the mother of a son currently serving in the British army who works so hard in his training and is serving his country to which he would give his life, I resent that statement. If you mean the general British public fighting spirit? I might agree. However, our British soldiers are still as dedicated to protecting us.
Im sure when having to defend your life in a war, you do step up, you have to, to survive.
Bore off
My grandmother was 10 years old living in London while this happened. She told me stories about having to sleep in the subway tunnels at night because of the bombings.
I was born in 1947 in the eastern suburbs of London following my father's return from the army. The Blitz united the country to fight the common peril. The community spirit when I grew up was at its peak. Everyone in the street that I lived in knew each other and supported each other for years later. In some ways, the community spirit in the older Brits still lives on and perhaps you noticed when you visited the UK today, community spirit still lives on with many. It is no longer what it was when I was young as those with memories are less every year but it is part of the British culture possibly as a result of those days. It is only by working together that great progress can be achieved. Individuality may have its place at times but it is no way to achieve greatness for everyone.
Dont forget there were american pilots that had volunteered and fought in Battle of Britain ,and from many other countries
Seven of them fell in the Battle of Britain. Let's not forget the Polish, French, Canadian, New Zealand, Australian, South Rhodesian, Israeli and other Commonwealth pilots, many of which fell.
@@davidmarsden9800 Israelis didnt exist then.There were probably Jewish fighter pilots.But not Israelis.
Yes the commonwealth countries
@@bwilson5401 Just the one listed in the statistics, which I don't know why as you're right Israel didn't exist until 1948 except for around 1300BC.
@ANDYDT ...there were around 3,500 pilots in the Battle of Britain , around 3,000 British and 500 mainly Polish , New Zealand, and Czech, and finally around 150 of other nationalities
Hi from Australia. Glad to see your love and interest in the UK and for somewhere outside of the USA. It appears the average American is little educated about the bigger world they live in. Sad, they miss out on so much to discover, explore and learn. I'm sure it would help in their own country to see what the rest of the world does, has done and why they are, who they are.
My old fella was an anti aircraft gunner on the Southeast coast back then, he was 23. Saw a lot of what you watched here, but didn't really want to talk about it. He did a few years before he died, also about being Scotland as a gunner protecting from raids from Norway. He was posted back to the Southeast coast in early 1944 where he saw fighters chasing and destroying V1 flying bombs. I'm immensely proud of his service in the Army, Ernie died in 2002 at 85.
My grandmother gave birth to my mum on this day, the car that took her to a hospital had a mattress on the roof because of the shrapnel falling from the sky on to rural kent.
Grandmother owned a pub in a little kent village which was on the edge of a airfield used by the RAF who were regulars at the pub.
My father who was 12 at the time was that day trapped in the ruins of his aunts house which had partially destroyed by a dropped bomb.
Dad was pinned under his neighbours body , the dear woman bled out and died on top him 😢
Something that rarely gets mentioned in this narrative is the number of non-British personnel involved in the RAF. There were many members of the RAF who came from around the Empire, Canada, South Africa, the Caribbean, Australia, New Zealand, etc. Not to mention all those who had already fought the Nazis in their own countries and made their way to Britain to continue the fight, Poles, Czechs, Free French, Belgian, Dutch, Norwegian, etc. Even people from neutral countries who recognised the danger that Nazi victory would pose to the entire world, instance a number of US citizens who crossed into Canada and joined the RAF claiming to be Canadian.
Whilst it is true that the majority of the RAF was British, some of the highest scoring "Aces" came from the ranks of these people who deserve to be fully recognised for their contribution.
What absolute nonsense…it ALWAYS gets mentioned..we are extremely grateful to our commonwealth brothers and sisters and everyone else that helped.. it’s only virtue signallers like you that brings it up …well you can stop patting yourself on the back..and you can put your flag down..There is no need for the perpetual offended to spout off.. 🙄🇬🇧
He has a lot of British blood and grit flowing through his veins...comes from his British grand parents and great grand parents...we are at our core among best people you will ever meet especially when we are really up against it..
Yes, the British are really up against it now!! And what are they doing about it? They are turning to fascism for answers!! The same fascist ideology they fought against in WW2
My Mother was part of the greatest generation of Britons. She died in 2009. She did not feed her children unless it was on rations until 1953. That was 14 years of managing with small portions. I was a late child and was born in 1963 so I was brought up to not waste things.
Kids being resilient is something grownups say to lessen their sense of guilt or shame. Ask any British person from the boomer generation in the UK and they will tell you what life was like growing up in the UK. Many seem not to have put two and two together, but we lived with the aftermath of WW2.
Reminisce with someone who was at a British school into the early ‘80s and they'll tell you about teachers going berserk and attacking students. Crazy teachers, along with crazy park-keepers or bus-conductors and commissionaires, car park attendants - all of them have been written into English culture, especially '60s/'70s comedy shows. So have the cold dark aunts who attended family get togethers, despite apparently hating everyone. They didn’t speak much, they had zero empathy or patience with their nieces and nephews.
Many of us had an uncle who was always too busy with something in his shed to come into the house for a cup of tea.
Almost any adult could hit you if they took exception to what you were doing, there would be consequence for them. I’ve been punched in face by a teacher when I was in elementary school. I’ve seen kids struck of half strangled by teachers.
Everyone my age has been made to sit at a table and forced to finish everything on our plate, regardless of how much we hated it. Many of us have gone to bed late because we were forced to sit at that table and the next day, we would only be given what we had refused the night before.
I was born in '62 and nobody 20yrs older than me wasn’t suffering from pretty severe PTSD . And elements of that were passed on to us.
@@adrianmcgrath1984 thank you! Very few people acknowledge what it was like to be the children of parents traumatised by the war.
I am a baby boomer and teachers could be crawl in the 1960s but we lived with it . On cross country runs in north Cornwall the games teacher would run behind us with a plimsole and hit the boys who were slow ,luckily for me I loved running. He made us run in to the sea and this was in the winter our legs when blue when running back to school happy days and know excuses
It made me laugh how apologetic you were on your fry up live stream when you realised you'd just said the blitz video really blew up. We all knew what you meant and when it's live you don't have a script to follow, did make me chuckle tho and great fry up attempt I watched all 90 mins.
Thank you so much I caught myself and was like ….🥴 haha next weekends toad in the hole lol
@32:00 Where he mentions a German Pilot landing in, what used to be, a Lunatic Asylum, and is now the Imperial War Museum, in Geraldine Mary Hermsworth Park, it was called, by the locals, Bedlam Park in the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's, to my knowledge, and was where we played on the Football and Cricket pitches, Tennis courts and swam in the Lido.
It is bounded by St George's Road, where the Roman Catholic Cathedral is situated, not my cup of Tea, CofE! Kennington Road, which leads south to the Oval Cricket Ground and north to Lambeth North Tube Station onto Westminster Bridge Road, where St Thomas's Hospital lies on the South side of Westminster Bridge, overlooking Parliament and Big Ben, and more importantly, where my two older Daughters were born and my wife enjoyed the view over the Thames (Tems to you yanks). Across the front of the park is Lambeth Road, which leads, to the west, Lambeth Palace and Lambeth Bridge, a strange area, as you walk from the park to the Palace, there are beautiful private, Victoria Houses on the north side and council flats (apartment blocks) on the South side. Behind these flats is a road with a famous name and a song named after it, The Lambeth Walk, where my Secondary School was situated and where I worked at two seperate businesses. Behind the Park is Brook Drive, where the Lambeth Hospital was and where I was born, where I had a Bedsit at 15 years old, and "Come on Eileen" by Dexys Midnight Runners video was shot. This area has a strange name, The Elephant and Castle and is on the Tube map, just in case you have a map from your trip.
I used to walk past all these places to get to my School from Waterloo, where I walked past The Old Vic Theatre.
I was just 11 years old, when my Mum took me out of School at midday, for a Dentist Appointment, it was Friday, April the 5th, 1968. We had just got on the traffic island on Bayliss Road at the Junction of Frazier Street, when a Hawker Hunter flew over our heads! At a height of no more than 100 feet. The story is that pilot Alan Pollock, "Buzzed" the Houses of Parliament a few times and then flew down the Thames, over Hungerford, Waterloo, Blackfriars, Southwark and London Bridges at a height of 200 to 300 feet, before flying through Tower Bridge!
Well, that never happened! There is no way he flew over Hungerford, Waterloo or Blackfriars Bridges! He may have flown over London Bridge to be "on target" for Tower Bridge but I can assure you he flew over our heads, down Bayliss Road, where he jinked left and then right, to follow the road across Waterloo Road, across the front of the Old Vic Theatre and down the Cut.
I am 72 now and very very proud of my first name , given to me by my dad , he and his best friend served in the RAF , at the age of 20 , Garry was killed by the luftwaffe , god rest his soul
My Grandma, served in British army, in London during WW2. She was one day working in her office, when a doodlebug bomb hit. She was knocked out and somehow only suffered concussion and a big bruise form her gas mask, while sadly her friend at the next desk died instantly. After that, my Grandma never ignored an air raid siren.
I suspect a lot of the realistic color film of the air battles were taken from the movie "Battle of Britain" released in 1969. This documentary ties actual footage (in black and white) & with the color footage (from the film),
it was ive watched the film many times. Even saw parts of it being made when i was a kid and lived close to the south coast and RAF Manston which was used.
In WW2 my mum's boyfriend was Bernie from Cleveland USA, a navigator on a Flying Fortress - I asked her many years later why she chose the navigator - she said, "Well he knew his way around".
Fair enough 🤣😂🤣😂
I like a bit of humour!
Thanks for such a sensitive delivery of this moment that is so important to us British folks.
An old neighbour across the road from my father was a pilot in the war, and my fathers next door neighbour told my father he had many medals for bravery. My fathers next door neighbour she had been in the Land Army, her husband was Scottish can’t remember what regiment he was in but he had in his army career been a guard at Buckingham Palace, can’t remember what he did in the war but after he was part of the Nuremberg Trials.The neighbours brother in the war dropped and picked up British spies in Germany. Another neighbour near my father was German she still had a very strong accent, I don’t know details but she escaped from being killed in Germany at the start of the war, maybe her family was Jewish.
I live in Oxfordshire and my elderly neighbour lived through the war. He told me about the young women being trained in Pounden who would land in France. He was quite taken by one of them and it was later rumoured that she was captured, tortured and killed. Unimaginable bravery from some very young people.
In 1940 Britain had the biggest Navy in the world.
So?
@@DerekLangdon Because it was critical during WWII to defeat Hitler. I would have thought that that was obvious.
@@valeriedavidson2785 This is about the Battle of Britain - ships can't fly 😉
@@gibson617ajgthe Royal Navy was a key component of the Battle of Britain in retaining control of home waters, given that German landings would have been amphibious, but it’s just not the usual focus as the exciting fighting was in the air…
@@vaudevillian7 The Battle Of Britain is probably recognised as an air war by everyone but you it seems. "The 13 hours that saved Britain".
Thanks for showing this
Oh wow 😮 Thank you for viewing we love and respect Great Britain and its History
Those taking part and talking about their memories are unique in that they have now all passed away and i suspect their memories were recorded in books and into history but nothing can match their actual words which were still clear in their minds.
In Glasgow Scotland, was bombed as well, my mother told me that her and her family lived in a tenement building and a parachute mine exploded nearby, they all ran out of the building, forgetting to bring my uncle who was a baby at the time and in his bath which was in front of the fire and he was covered in soot, my mum and her brothers always had a good laugh when recounting the story.
London isn't all of the UK.
Two thirds of the pilots were home grown Brits and there were not hundreds of poles ,The vast majority of the remainder were from the commonwealth countries.
80% of RAF Fighter Command pilots during the battle of Britain were of British birth.
I thought I'd create a simple "visual aid" in order to assist people learning about the history of the battle of Britain. There is much ongoing debate about the nationalities and proportions of RAF fighter pilots who took part in the battle, with occasionally a furtive aspect which attempts to portray the battle as a victory of "mostly foreign pilots". Below is a graphical representation of the proportion of pilot nationalities serving within RAF Fighter Command during the summer of 1940.
Each flag is roughly equivalent to 30 pilots, The numbers after each nation are the ACTUAL number of aircrew from that country, and the approximate percentage of RAF Fighter Command's establishment in the summer of 1940 that they represented.
The figures are taken from the RAF records of the awards of the highly coveted "Battle of Britain clasp" to the British 1939-45 Campaign Star. Which was scrupulously ONLY awarded to RAF & Fleet Air Arm aircrew who flew at least one active sortie in the UK in any RAF fighter aircraft between 10th July 1940 and 31st Oct 1940.
🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧 UK (2342) (80%)
🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱 Poland (145) (5%)
🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿 New Zealand (127) (4%)
🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦 Canada (112) (4%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿 Czechoslovakia (88) (3%)
🇦🇺 Australia (32) (1%)
🇧🇪 Belgium (28) (1%)
🇿🇦 S. Africa (25) (1%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇺🇳 Other nations (France (13), R o Ireland (10), USA (9), Rhodesia (3), Newfoundland (1), Jamaica (1), Barbados (1)) (1%)
(And just to preempt any wandering idiot lefty "Identity warriors" from protesting about "The lack of credit given to the black pilots who fought in the battle of Britain"... the pilots from South Africa, Rhodesia & the Caribbean were all of white descent).
The UK was the only country that fought WW2 from the first to the very last day. Very few know about the “Forgotten IVth’ in Asia. The first army to defeat a full Japanese army at Imphal / Kohima ( the battle that turned on the Defense of a tennis court, after two months of hand to hand fighting ) ( Britains ‘Thermopylae’) , then another full Japanese army at Rangoon. 75% Indian, 5% African volunteers and 20% British under the superb leadership of Britains greatest ever general. Bill Slim.
The epitaph at the memorial at Kohima reads ‘When you go home, tell them of us and say, for your tomorrow, we gave our today.’
Thank you for this wonderful reaction.
My mum walked past a field everyday with a horse in it and she fed the horse carrots everyday until one morning she walked past the field and the horse had been blown to bits. She was 10.
Horrific. The horror clearly stayed with her. I weep for the innocent animals, as well as the people.
Later in the war the Germans changed to using rocket bombs known as V bombers or Doodle bugs. You never knew where they would land just heard the engine stop then waited for the explosion. Check them out.
They were V1 pulse jet bombs-Doodlebugs and supersonic rockets V2.
The lady, Dame Vera, was celebrated as a singer during WWII, she was Vera Lynn, (from Bermondsey, in London) named "the Force's Sweetheart" as she helped keep the British people's and the service men and women's hopes up for victory, to keep them looking forward and remain - as far as possible - in good spirits and calm enough to maintain their war efforts, and be supportive of each other during those incredibly difficult times. Vera was later made a Dame (which is the female version of a Knighthood) for her good works during the war, helping to keep both the general poplace and the men and women of the Forces in good spirit, plus charity works later.
Dame Vera lived until she was 103, and,
I think, she should be remembered by the Brits, at least, for her stirling efforts during incredible times, plus her continued good works for charities after the war was over.
R.I.P. Dame Vera Lynn.
The whole war in the west hinged on the Battle of Britain.
By defeating the Luftwaffe, the allies were able to turn Britain into one massive aircraft carrier, and take the war to the Germans.
In the west, it was the high water mark. The Germans only ever went backwards after it.
Plus we must remember that Britain fought alone against German and the USSR (with Sweden also supplying Hitler's war machine) for almost 3 years. Incredible.
And also remember that until the nazi declaration of war on the USA on 11th Dec 1941, the USA was NEUTRAL, and whereas we're constantly told that "the US saved Britain", the real fact is that US corporations (and subsequently the US govt) was also making MASSIVE profits by supplying the nazis at the same time it was selling its wares to the UK.
That's NOT an attack on ordinary Americans such as this couple... we Brits love you all, but it IS an unpalatable truth about how global corporations place their profits above EVERY other consideration... even MORE so today !!!
P.S Lucky hubby 😃👌👍
As somebody whose country fought right alongside Britain throughout those three years, I feel I ought to be a little insulted by this comment.
@@TillyOrifice What country?
@@TillyOrifice The defence of the UK during 1940 was carried out by +95% British troops, barring a single Canadian infantry division and 4 understrength brigades from Auz and NZ.
By the time of the expected invasion in Sept 1940 the British army was fielding
2 British Armoured divisions
2 British Armoured tank brigades
15 British infantry divisions (full strength)
7 British infantry divisions (under strength).
7 British independent infantry Brigades
2 British motor machine gun Brigades
1 Canadian infantry division (full strength) (plus some small under equipped support units of a 2nd division)
2 Australian independent infantry brigades (BOTH under strength & under-equipped)
1 NZ infantry "division" (actually 2 understrength NZ infantry Brigades but with an attached British motor machine gun brigade)
The above units were in addition to the 1.5 MILLION British citizens who made up the UK's "Home Guard".
At this early stage of the war (1939-41) with regard to the defence of Britain, the commonwealth was for all intents & purposes a vocal supporter from across the world, though they obviously grew to make a LARGE contribution to the British Imperial war effort from 1941 onwards.
@@TillyOrifice And not forgetting the pilots of RAF Fighter Command during the battle of Britain, I thought I'd create a simple "visual aid" in order to assist people learning about the history of the battle of Britain. There is much ongoing debate about the nationalities and proportions of RAF fighter pilots who took part in the battle, with occasionally a furtive aspect which attempts to portray the battle as a victory of "mostly foreign pilots". Below is a graphical representation of the proportion of pilot nationalities serving within RAF Fighter Command during the summer of 1940.
Each flag is roughly equivalent to 30 pilots, The numbers after each nation are the ACTUAL number of aircrew from that country, and the approximate percentage of RAF Fighter Command's establishment in the summer of 1940 that they represented.
The figures are taken from the RAF records of the awards of the highly coveted "Battle of Britain clasp" to the British 1939-45 Campaign Star, which was SCRUPULOUSLY only awarded to RAF & Fleet Air Arm aircrew who flew at least one active sortie in the UK in any RAF fighter aircraft between 10th July 1940 and 31st Oct 1940.
🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧 UK (2342) (80%)
🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱 Poland (145) (5%)
🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿 New Zealand (127) (4%)
🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦 Canada (112) (4%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿 Czechoslovakia (88) (3%)
🇦🇺 Australia (32) (1%)
🇧🇪 Belgium (28) (1%)
🇿🇦 S. Africa (25) (1%) (1940 flag emoji not available)
🇺🇳 Other nations (France (13), R o Ireland (10), USA (9), Rhodesia (3), Newfoundland (1), Jamaica (1), Barbados (1)) (1%)
(And just to preempt any wandering idiot lefty "Identity warriors" from protesting about "The lack of credit given to the black pilots who fought in the battle of Britain"... the pilots from South Africa, Rhodesia & the Caribbean were all of white descent).
One thing is of note the. Number of woman who were part of the defence..
Douglas Bader (the one legged Air ace) said remember it was not the the few but the many who stood firm who kept the planes running kept the electric running food supplied he said the Fighter's Aces did their best but every one was welded together. It truly was Our Finest Hour...
Douglas Bader had a double amputation
As University student I worked for the kindest, gentlest headteacher ever, in the mid 70s. He had been shot down TWICE in one day during the battle. After the first, he was deemed fit to fly by the MO and ordered into another available plane. The melee was so intense luck played a big part of it. Down he came again.
Youse Americans ever since ww2 Britton have always stood by America through thick and thin because you came into the war allot of respect
Not only is your grammar poor, so is your historical knowledge.
The US didn't "come into the war". The US government bent over backwards to AVOID being dragged into the war, and MUCH preferred letting one of her nearest global rivals fight on alone opposing the totalitarian takeover of Europe, while the US drained her gold reserves.
It took the NAZI declaration of war on the United States on 11th Dec 1941 to DRAG the US against her will into the war in Europe.
You may be English? But your English language skills, ain’t English!!
We are the UNITED Kingdom, we shall never surrender!
😂😂😂 even the Germans spoke about fighting the “ English”.
You Brits surrendered years ago! You belong to the Americans now!!!
Hey❤, always much respect to Americans learning about European history! Thanks.
My Grandfather was a squadron leader in the RAF..and untill the day he passed he would never speak about whr he went through and saw,,even to my Grandmother. R.i.P Grandad,,and thank you xx
The 'Garden of England' is a name we call the county of Kent.
Thank you for that we didn’t know that 😇
Its videos like this that show why brits have such a stiff upper lip, keep calm and carry on attitude embedded in our culture. And why having a sense of humour was so important when everything else around you is so awful. Laugh or cry !!!
Not now though.
Thank you for this reaction, you are at the top of a rapidly growing list of Americans that would be warmly welcomed here in the UK, I appreciate you both.
My mum n dad were married in that church.. Its not East London. Its South East London near the Borough SE1
America only joined the fight against the Germans because the day after Pearl Harbour Hitler declared war on America, otherwise America would just have fought the Japanese. As for the American contribution which was immense, the Russian contribution was actually larger and had vastly greater casualties of 20+ million people.
Good job you got involved though because the Germans were working on an Amerika Bomber amongst other goodies which after the war became part of your space program instead of flattening your cities.
"the day after Pearl Harbour [sic]" would have been December 8th and Hitler didn't declare war until the 11th. Most likely dragging his feet because he didn't want war with America and was disappointed that his Japanese "ally" attacked the United States instead of helping Germany defeat Stalin. Speaking of the postwar - Do you remember who supplied jet engines to Stalin which led to the MiG-15 which was used in combat in Korea against British and Americans?
And the arrogant yank enters the room.. all hail America 🙄
@@bearcatXFI take it you also know who supplied Gloster experimental jet aircraft to the USA in 1942? I take it you also know who supplied the US with the cavity magnetron? I take it you also know that Britain gave all the research they'd done into Atomic weapons (Britain started research in '41) to the Manhattan project which gave them a bloody big headstart? Only to cut the UK out of Atomic weapons program in 1945? There are a fair few other examples I can give you too where the USA has proved not to be the best ally in the world.
@@bearcatXFShall we discuss the Gloster experimental jet supplied to the US in 1942? Or perhaps the cavity magnetron? Or should we discuss all the British research on the Atomic bomb, see, Britain started research on an A-bomb in '41. All of which was supplied to the US, whom decided post '45 to cut Britain out of the Atomic program. Those are just a few examples I can think off. Or should we discuss the financial pressures, courtesy of the Monroe doctrine, the US put on France & Britain regarding the Suez Canal in 1956 perhaps?
The Russian contribution was BLOOD! More than any other country in the world! Remember that bud, when you hate on them! The American contribution was war materials!! Incidentally the US came out of the war a lot richer than when they went into it!!