Title: The Battle of Britain
1The Battle of Britain
2I expect that the Battle of Britain is about to
begin. Upon this battle rests the future of
Christian civilisation. Hitler knows that he will
have to break us in this island or lose the war.
If we succeed all Europe may be free and the life
of the world move forwards in to broad sunlit
uplands. But if we fail we will sink in to the
abyss of a new dark age made more protracted and
more sinister by the light of a perverted science.
3Following the collapse of France on June18th
1940, Hitler ordered plans for an invasion of
Britain. The success of the plan would depend on
the Luftwaffes (airforce) ability to destroy the
RAF first. Air Marshall Goering promised Hitler
it could be achieved given the Luftwaffes almost
41 advantage over the RAF in aircraft.
4Fighter Command sectors. 11 Group was the front
line in the battle and bore the brunt of enemy
attacks.
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7Radar allowed fighter controllers on the ground
to detect the numbers, direction and altitude of
enemy aircraft. Fighters could be sent to the
exact location to intercept them.
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12Read the notes on the four phases of the Battle
- How important was the outcome of this battle for
(a) Britain (b) Germany ? - To what extent did the following factors decide
the battle - (a) Leadership (b) luck ( c ) tactical errors
(d) technology
13Outcome of the battle
- For Britain
- Managed to prevent an invasion by German ground
forces. - Showed determined resistance to Nazi aggression.
- Boosted civilian morale following Norway and
Dunkirk. - Showed USA that Britain was still in the fight
14- US Ambassador to Britain in 1940 was Joseph
Kennedy (father of JFK). He telegrammed Roosevelt
regularly after Dunkirk predicting that Britain
would collapse in a matter of weeks and make
peace. Battle of Britain boosted British prestige
in the USA.
15Outcome of the battle
- For Germany
- First strategic defeat of the war
- Britain remained undefeated / unoccupied
- Britain became a base from which to launch air
raids in Europe and help resistance fighters on
the continent. - From 1942 Britain became the base for the US
build up of forces in Europe.
16Factors luck
- German accidental air raids on London led to
retaliation strike on Berlin by RAF which led to
a major change in tactics by Luftwaffe to city
bombing from attacks on radar stations and
airfields.
17Factors technology
- RAF fighters were modern and fast. Spitfire was
fractionally slower than Me109 but more agile.
Me109 had limited range over Britain. - Radar allowed the RAF to deploy aircraft with
precision and avoided the need for wasteful
patrols. The first instance in the history of
warfare where commanders had an up to date
picture of the battle as it unfolded in real
time
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19Leadership
- Dowding and Park were brilliant RAF commanders.
- Technology allowed them to oversee the battle.
- Goering had confused aims and failed to press
home the advantage the Luftwaffe had by
mid-September 1940
20Tactical errors
- The switch to city bombing took the pressure off
Fighter Command and allowed them to regroup, rest
and repair airfields and aircraft. - Failure to wipe out the RAF by October made a
postponement of Sealion inevitable as weather
conditions in the English Channel would have made
an amphibious assault too risky.
21Key evaluation question Did the RAF win the
battle or did the Luftwaffe lose it ?Luftwaffe
lost it.
- RAF desperately short of pilots by September. 25
killed / wounded / battle fatigued. - Polish, Canadian, South African, American
volunteer pilots made up the shortfall. Many RAF
pilots were hastily trained with only a few hours
experience in fast fighters. - Germans began the battle with a 41 ratio of
advantage over the RAF against almost identical
aircraft and battle-hardened pilots.
22RAF won it
- British fighter aircraft production (Lord
Beaverbrook made Minister of aircraft production)
ensured delivery of at least 200 aircraft a month
by September. - German morale affected by continued RAF
resistance. Poor intelligence underestimated
strength of RAF resistance. - German losses peaked on September 15th 1940 with
over 60 aircraft lost in one day. - Radar gave the RAF the edge in defensive
planning. - RAF fighting over home ground.
23December 29th 1940 - the second great fire of
London - provided one of the most iconic images
of the 20th century.
24The nature and extent of civilian bombing in
Britain.
- The Blitz lasted from September 1940-May 1941.
There were not air raids every single night. - Most large cities in Britain were bombed
including Belfast and Glasgow. - London was the principle target for Luftwaffe
attacks, receiving 53 nights of consecutive
raids.
25London Docks
Financial district The City.
West End
Parliament and Government offices. Whitehall
River Thames. On a clear moonlit night reflected
a superb navigational target for German bomber
crews.
26How effective were the Luftwaffe raids ?
- Read the notes on the effectiveness of the
German raids on British industrial targets. - Based on that evaluation, should the Germans
have - (a) increased their attacks to increase pressure
on Britain to make peace. - (b) Pursue a different strategy altogether ?
27Limitations of the German bombing campaign
- Germany only dropped 35,000 tons of bombs during
the 1940-41 Blitz. This was a fraction of what
was dropped on Germany later on (400,000 tons
dropped on Germany in last four months of war) - Germany lacked a heavy long range bomber in
1940 similar to the Lancaster and B29 bombers
used by the RAF and USAF from 1943-45.
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29Electronic warfare battle of the beams.
British engineers discovered these beams and
devised a method of jamming them so German
bomber crews could not follow their path.
German radio transmitters in France transmitted
two radio beams which could be made to cross over
a precise target such as an aircraft factory.
German bomber crews used these beams to navigate
to their targets.
The next five years saw a deadly electronic
arms race to win the radar battle.
30Why wasnt poison gas used ?
- The British government had expected poison gas to
be used on civilian targets. - All citizens were equipped with gas masks.
- Germany had stocks of chlorine and mustard gas
(used in WW1) and newer nerve gases such as
Tabun. (Effectiveness of gas masks highly
doubtful against these agents !) - Fear of retaliation prevented their use just as
with nuclear weapons during the Cold War era.
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32About 30cm in length, these magnesium incendiary
bombs were designed to start fires, overwhelm
rescue services and light a path for the second
wave of bombers to drop high explosive bombs.
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34The night London burned, Roosevelt delivered one
of his most famous fireside chat radio
broadcasts.
If Great Britain goes down, the Axis powers will
control the continents of Europe, Asia, Africa,
Australasia, and the high seasand they will be
in a position to bring enormous military and
naval resources against this hemisphere. It is no
exaggeration to say that all of us, in all the
Americas, would be living at the point of a guna
gun loaded with explosive bullets, economic as
well as military.
35Reading tasks
- Read the sections from Juliet Gardiner on the
raids on Coventry 14th/15th November 1940 and
London 29th December 1940. - What effects did the raids have on
- Civilian morale, housing, industrial production
and the emergency services
36The Baedeker Raids
- Following an RAF raid on the historic city of
Lubeck, the Luftwaffe launched a series of
revenge attacks on British historical /
cultural targets. - The targets were allegedly picked out of the
famous Baedeker Guide books. - Exeter, Bath, Cambridge, Canterbury and Norwich
were all bombed in April-May 1942. - These were small-scale raids on small target
areas as the majority of the Luftwaffe was
stationed on the Russian front.
37What if.?
- If Hitler had not decided to invade the USSR in
June 1941 he could have concentrated all his
airpower on a sustained and massive aerial
bombardment of the British Isles lasting for at
least one or two years. What would have been the
outcome ?
38Had Germany not invaded the USSR in 1941 they
might have caused far more destruction to Britain.
39The effectiveness of civilian bombing raids on
Britain
40The effectiveness of civilian bombing raids on
Britain