Churchill and the Battle of Britain: Days of Decision
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Churchill and the Battle of Britain - Nicola Barber
Acknowledgments
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Cover photograph of Winston Churchill in 1945 reproduced with the permission of Alamy (©Pictorial Press Ltd)
Cover photograph of a squadron of British fighters in flight reproduced with the permission of Corbis (©Bettmann).
We would like to thank Dr. John Allen Williams for his invaluable help in the preparation of this book.
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Contents
A Decisive Day
Who Was Winston Churchill?
Gallipoli and After
Between Two Wars
Outbreak of War
Preparing for Battle
The Battle of Britain
After the Battle
Timeline
Notes on Sources
Glossary
Find Out More
Index
Some words are printed in bold, like this. You can find out what they mean by looking in the glossary on page 59.
A Decisive Day
It is September 15, 1940. As wave after wave of German bombers fly toward southern England, UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill, with his trademark cigar clamped between his teeth, makes his way to Royal Air Force (RAF) headquarters in London. There, he is met by Air Vice-Marshal Keith Park, the man responsible for the RAF squadrons defending London and the southeast of England from air attack.
September 14, 1940: At the height of the Battle of Britain, Hurricane fighter planes take off from an airfield in the south of the UK to defend against German attacks.
Deep underground in the operations room, Churchill and Park watch as counters on a large tabletop map track the progress of the German attacks. As each squadron of RAF fighters takes off to intercept the enemy, a light on a board comes on to show that the planes are airborne.
Early in the afternoon, as the lights flash on one by one, Churchill turns to Park. What reserves have we got?
he asks. There are none,
replies Park. Every single squadron is in the air, battling to defend the United Kingdom.¹ Churchill and Park both know that this is a decisive momen in the defense of the United Kingdom against a possible German invasion. In order to win, the Germans need to destroy the RAF. This is now a battle for survival.
Battle of Britain Day
Since the end of World War II, September 15 has been commemorated in the United Kingdom as Battle of Britain Day, the day when the RAF fighters managed to hold out against the German bombers. The battle was by no means over, but many people consider this day to mark a crucial turning point in the Battle of Britain. Yet for Churchill, it was one of many such crucial moments, both in the past and yet to come.
A crowd follows Winston Churchill (center) as he makes one of his frequent visits to inspect bomb damage after German raids in London.
The man for the moment?
Churchill had become prime minister of the United Kingdom in May 1940. At the time, many powerful people had questioned some of his past decisions and were less than enthusiastic about giving him this role. But as the German Army stormed across Europe and overwhelmed France, the majority of people came to believe that Churchill was the right man for the moment. A U.S. journalist for the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote of Churchill’s first speech as prime minister: He proved himself an honest man as well as a man of action. Britain has reason to be enheartened by his… bluntness and his courage.
²
So, what were the qualities that made Churchill such an inspirational war leader and helped to win the Battle of Britain? And what crucial decisions did Churchill make as the United Kingdom struggled to come to terms with the disastrous fall of France in 1940, as well as the threat of imminent German invasion?
Decisive words: Churchill alone
Everything depended on him and him alone. Only he had the power to make the nation believe that it could win.
³
Edward Bridges, cabinet secretary, writing about Winston Churchill between 1940 and 1942