How the people of Britain defend
themselves against German attacks.
The British Government had already
carried out evacuation procedures and other preparations in September 1938
at the time of the Munich Crisis. In 1939, therefore, it was fully prepared.
38,000,000 gas masks, 1,250,000 cardboard coffins and 400,000 Anderson shelters
had been produced to try to prepare for the effects of bombing.
Immediately war began many regulations and restrictions came into force. It
became an offence not to carry your gas mask at all times; cars had to be
immobilised; blackout regulations were enforced. 1,250,000 people were evacuated.
However, for seven months very little happened and people began to relax.
Many children returned home and the period became known as the "phoney
war". This came to an end in April 1940 when Hitler invaded Denmark,
Norway, Holland, Belgium and France. Within a matter of weeks the British
Army in France was cut off at Dunkirk and had to be rescued. By the end of
June 1940, Britain was facing Germany alone and seemed likely to be invaded
at any moment. The army had lost most of its equipment at Dunkirk and the
men who had been conscripted in 1939 and 1940 were not yet ready for action.

If Hitler had been able to invade in 1940, there would have been very little
that could have been done. Why he failed is explained in the article on Axis
Success.
In the summer of 1940 the government tried to do all it could to prevent an
invasion:
The Local Defence Volunteers were set up, later to be
called the Home Guard. These were men who were too old to serve in the army
or who were in "reserved occupations". They trained every week,
but would not have been able to defeat the German Army.
Children were sent out to collect foliage for camouflage
and people were asked to hand in scrap metal so that it could be used for
planes for the RAF. These were really attempts to keep morale up and to make
people believe that they were doing something to help.
The south coast was quickly fortified. Machine-gun posts
were built in medieval castles. Signposts and the names of railway stations
were removed so that German forces would not know where they were. Church
bells were kept silent. They would only be rung in the event of an invasion.
Much more important was the line of radar stations that
had been built since 1937 along the east and south coasts. These warned the
RAF when attacks were coming in the summer and autumn of 1940. In addition
thousands of volunteers worked in the Observer Corps, identifying and counting
German planes as they flew over.
In September 1940, after Hitler had given up trying to invade Britain, the
Blitz began. This was a period of heavy bombing of British cities by night.
London was bombed for fifty-three nights in a row. A blackout had been Aenforced in 1939. All lights had
to be hidden at night. Windows were taped to prevent people being injured
by flying glass.
Anderson air-raid shelters were distributed. These were
dug into the garden and covered with earth. They were designed to protect
people against falling brickwork if the houses were bombed.
All houses had to have a safe room, usually in a cellar
or on the ground floor, where people could sleep during a raid if there was
no shelter. Some people slept in a Morrison shelter, a steel cage that fitted
under a dining table.
Air Raid Precaution Wardens were appointed for every
street. They had the job of checking everybody's house. They had to be told
how many people were sleeping in each house each night. Other volunteers manned
the Auxiliary Fire Service, the Civil Defence or the Women's Voluntary Service,
which looked after casualties, or worked as fire-watchers to put out incendiary
bombs.
In 1944 and 1945 Britain was attacked from the air once again.
The first attacks came from pilotless rocket planes called
V1s. Each rocket carried about one tonne of explosive and when it ran out
of fuel it fell to the ground and exploded. At first there was little that
could be done about these, but eventually many of the anti-aircraft guns around
London were moved down to the south coast and used to shoot down the rockets
as they came over.
V2s were a much more serious threat. They were real rockets
that were fired from sites in Holland. They could not be shot down and there
was no defence against them. The attacks were only stopped when the launch
sites were overrun in 1945.
The effects of bombing on Britain?

The Blitz was the name given
to the prolonged period of bombing of British cities, which began in September
1940 and lasted until November. The worst affected city was London, where
13,000 people were killed in 1940. In the rest of Britain 10,000 people were
killed. Coventry was hit by a very heavy raid in November 1940, which destroyed
the centre of the city and killed about 500 people. Belfast was not bombed
until April 1941, when the "Belfast Blitz" killed nearly one thousand
people.
The Blitz began after Hitler gave up his attempt to invade
Britain in September 1940; this had been called "Operation Sealion".
He was trying to force Britain to surrender. The Blitz was really intended
to break the morale of the British people. If they saw their homes being destroyed
and their loved ones being killed, Hitler believed that they would force the
government to come to terms with him.
The Blitz was also an attempt to destroy industry. In
London the docks were attacked regularly and this meant that people living
in the East End were often bombed. The Luftwaffe, the German airforce, also
tried to hit railway lines and junctions.
At the time the government would only allow stories to be published in newspapers
which said how well the British people were coping. "Britain can take
it" was one slogan. This was an example of propaganda. 
To find out more about the ways that propaganda was used during the war look
at the Propaganda article.
In fact there are many examples of people being very near to total despair
in the winter of 1941. The Blitz had much more devastating effects than the
government was prepared to admit:
In October 1940 Balham underground station was hit by
a bomb that burst a water main. Sixty-four people drowned. This story was
never released until after the war, because many people sheltered from air
raids in underground stations. If they had found out what had happened there
might well have been panic.
Overall bombing had very little effect on the war effort. Most factories recovered
from the effects of an air raid in two to three days and the total loss of
life from air raids was about 60,000. This was far less than had been expected
at the beginning of the war.
The effects of rationing
and evacuation on people In Britain.
.Rationing was introduced in January 1940 and was
gradually extended during the war. Food was the main item, but petrol, clothing
and furniture were also rationed.
Rationing had two aims:

The foods that were rationed were meat, fats, cheese, butter,
eggs and sweets. Bread, potatoes and vegetables were never rationed. Milk
was rationed, but at a high level. Rationing led to an improvement in people's
health as they could not eat fatty foods and had to eat more vegetables, potatoes
and bread. However, most people found it boring and it had a serious effect
on morale. Often it was the housewife who had to try to find ways of coming
up with new ways of cooking the same limited range of foods.
Many children were evacuated from city centres; some of the families they
went to were very surprised at their state of health. In 1941 there was a
series of articles published by the Women's Institute describing the health,
clothing and manners of many children from city centres. These effects made
many realise that something should and could be done to improve the lives
of the people of Britain when the war ended.
So in 1941 the government asked Sir William Beveridge to lead a commission
of inquiry to find out what could be done. It was Beveridge's report in 1942
which led to the creation of the Welfare State.
Both Rationing and Evacuation affected women much more than men. It was the
housewife who had to cope with them. Sir Winston Churchill stated that it
was the housewives of Britain who enabled the country to survive Hitler's
attempts to force surrender.
Summary
When war broke out in
September 1939, the British government expected that the effects on life in
Britain would be very serious. Throughout the 1930s there had been many
predictions about the effects that bombing would have on cities. In May 1937
there was newsreel film of the attack by the Condor Legion on the Spanish city
of Guernica. So it was believed that bombing would cause massive destruction
and loss of life.
Answer
!
1.How
did the people of Britain defend themselves against German attacks?
2.What
effects did bombing have on Britain?
3.What
effects did rationing and evacuation have on people in Britain?