1 / 12

BRITAIN AND WORLD WAR TWO

BRITAIN AND WORLD WAR TWO. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2. 1939 – 40: Phoney War April 1940: German invasion of Norway – GB fails to prevent German victory; Chamberlain resigns and Churchill becomes PM Churchill’s speeches help rally the nation; importance of Churchill as PM

taniel
Download Presentation

BRITAIN AND WORLD WAR TWO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BRITAIN AND WORLD WAR TWO

  2. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • 1939 – 40: Phoney War • April 1940: German invasion of Norway – GB fails to prevent German victory; Chamberlain resigns and Churchill becomes PM • Churchill’s speeches help rally the nation; importance of Churchill as PM • May 1940: German Blitzkrieg attack on France

  3. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • Blitzkrieg = “lightning war”. Key to German success (p.124) • British Expeditionary Force sent to help France under Lord Gort • When France fell, Gort instructed to abandon support for France and evacuate • Dunkirk evacuation (Operation Dynamo) seen as great success, although British hardware left behind (p.125 -6); BEF had been saved though

  4. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • ‘Dunkirk spirit’ helped boost British morale – propaganda victory; military defeat though. • France controlled by Germans – directly in Northern France; puppet regime in south (Vichy) • Hitler plans Operation Sealion – invasion of Britain

  5. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • Summer 1940, Germany attacks British airfields, ports and radar stations, preparatory to invasion • RAF defended successfully (Battle of Britain) but were very near to defeat; main problem training of new airmen • Hitler changes tactics to bombing of cities (Blitz) just as defeat seemed likely for GB (p.127) • Need to consider importance of Battle of Britain

  6. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • Blitz was designed to break British morale – continued through the winter of 1940 • London and other major cities targets (e.g. Coventry, 10 hour raid, Nov. 1940) • June 1941: Hitler launched attack of USSR (Operation Barbarossa), perhaps believing Britain had been defeated

  7. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • Battle of the Atlantic – Germans attack shipping into and out of GB • Use of ‘wolf pack’ convoys by Germany • Various GB techniques used to defeat convoys (p.128) but not until 1943, with U.S. help, did the tide turn in Allies’ favour

  8. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • British bombing raids targeted German cities from 1940 • By 1942, GB bombing entire cities in attempt to destroy German industrial production and break morale • Bombing at night resulted in high civilian casualties • Attack on Dresden (Feb. 1945) was subsequently controversial (p.130)

  9. BRITAIN’S MILITARY CONTRIBUTION TO WW2 • Need to consider effect of British air war against Germany • June 1944: D-Day landings (Operation Overlord) with U.S. General Eisenhower in command • Stalin had wanted earlier start to ‘Second Front’ • Invasion in Normandy took Germans by surprise – they had expected it in Calais (p.131-2) • Despite high numbers of wounded and killed on first day, D-Day landings marked beginning of German defeat

  10. BRITAIN AND THE HOME FRONT • Conscription was introduced when war was declared in September 1939 • May 1940: Emergency Powers Act gave govt. complete control over ‘person and property’ • Roles such as Air Raid Wardens and Home Guard recruited (p.134) • Effect on women even greater than in WW1, as they take on wider range of jobs (p.135 - 6)

  11. BRITAIN AND THE HOME FRONT • Different women’s organisations formed (p.136) – e.g. Women’s Land Army • January 1940: Rationing introduced; propaganda campaign to encourage healthy eating and growing own food • Govt. took various measures to protect civilians, including evacuation of children (p.138-9); air-raid shelters and establishment of civil defence force (p.140)

  12. BRITAIN AND THE HOME FRONT • Ministry of Information established to co-ordinate various propaganda campaigns. • Propaganda warned of spies, encouraged self-sufficiency, tried to boost morale (p.142-3) • Newspapers also censored • Cinema newsreels and radio broadcasts also used in the propaganda effort

More Related