surlyseagull
Well-known member
- Aug 23, 2008
- 848
Yes I really enjoyed reading that .....good post
Sorry Trig,they were very close. They had invasion barges all along the coast of Northern French ports,the main targets were Sussex and Kent some of Devon,they had already taken the Channel Islands...all that Hitler needed now was air superority to launch 0peration Sea Lion.
Our radar stations and airfields were being attacked,some times 3 times a day,we suffered a heavy loss of men and aircraft...the British pilots were exhausted...Had Goering continued for another couple of weeks it would.ve been all over. Then a lone german bomber saved the day...in the confusion of night it dropped it's bombs on London. Our reply was to put as many bombers over Berlin and retaliate,we lost quite a few of them and did very little damage, but infuriated Hitler and Goering (Goering had made a boast that no British bomber would ever bomb Berlin) so they went for all out bombing on London...this gave the RAF time to repair the airfields,radar station,get pilots from the Commonwealth and America,and produce more planes,delivered by women pilots...a much needed respite.
Although Hitler had more planes than us we had the advantage of watching them come over,put up planes to be ready for them,we saved fuel and flying time...our pilots were bailing out over friendly territory...theirs to capture...eventually Hitler realised that he could not invade and called off the invasion and turned his attention to Operation Barbarossa...the invasion of Russia.
Operation Sea Lion was a very very close to happening My Mum took us to Ringwood to an aunt who had a mud cottage in the countryside
Being a kid I wanted to go back to Brighton,loved watching the planes and the dogfights...little did I realise that people were dying up there,Brighton got it's share of Bombing...one hitting the road between our house and my cousins house opposite.
You don't need to apologise babe, I still don't agree with you.Sorry Trig,they were very close.
They were nowhere near having the air superiority required to launch an amphibian assault. And you say they had invasion barges along the coast - they didn't have an invasion fleet ready....all that Hitler needed now was air superority to launch 0peration Sea Lion.
That is just complete nonsense. I'm well aware of Germany switching her attacks to London, and away from our airfields (this is what we were taught at school 30 years ago). Do you know how many of our airfields were out of action in the war, and for how long? I believe the total is something like one airfield, for one day. And look at the number of fighters we had available, the numbers weren't in decline, we were making them as fast as they were being shot down.Had Goering continued for another couple of weeks it would.ve been all over.
A slight oversimplification of the Battle of Britain, if you read one of the more serious histories of the Battle, such as Stephen Bungay's 'The Most Dangerous Enemy' it becomes very clear that the Germans did not have a real chance of winning the Battle using the forces available to them and the tactics they adopted.
They did not 'bomb radar stations 3 times a day', they gave up bombing them early in the Battle as they didn't think they had put any out of action (they were wrong and it WAS another serious error but the Germans didn't understand how important radar was to the Air Defence system until too late).
The Germans switching to bombing London was not a sensible thing to do either but it didn't decide the Battle.
I wouldn't say Brighton got its share of the bombing either, as important military and civilian Docks both Portsmouth and Southampton were repeatedly heavily bombed but there was little of military value in Brighton to go after.
Opportunist raids to disrupt life down below or dumping an unused bombload on anything vaguely English on the way back over the Channel would have been more like it.
Interesting thread. I think Eastbourne and Hastings also had a pasting from the Luftwaffe, sadly easy targets for them on their way back from their main targets.
Back to the OP's theme - here in Norfolk there was a huge American military presence with something like 50,000 US air force / army air force personnel and seems like an airfield every 5 miles. That was in addition to a big concentration of RAF stations and Army bases. Yes the Yanks got stick from a minority of locals for 'being overpaid and over here' but 7,000 airmen from just the US 2nd Air Division alone lost their lives. There are lots of memorials around to remind us.
The air museum at Duxford just off the M11 in Cambridgeshire is a superb day out, mainly RAF and civilian stuff but also an excellent museum of US aircraft. The sheer scale of American air casualties in WWII is brought home by the images of every lost aircraft etched on the glass screens as you approach their part of the museum.
Of course the US forces are still operating from Lakenheath and Mildenhall and most weekdays/nights we get several F15s practice dogfighting overhead, in addition to our local RAF Tornados and Typhoons. It's a military anoraks corner in these parts.
A slight oversimplification of the Battle of Britain, if you read one of the more serious histories of the Battle, such as Stephen Bungay's 'The Most Dangerous Enemy' it becomes very clear that the Germans did not have a real chance of winning the Battle using the forces available to them and the tactics they adopted.
They did not 'bomb radar stations 3 times a day', they gave up bombing them early in the Battle as they didn't think they had put any out of action (they were wrong and it WAS another serious error but the Germans didn't understand how important radar was to the Air Defence system until too late).
The Germans switching to bombing London was not a sensible thing to do either but it didn't decide the Battle.
I wouldn't say Brighton got its share of the bombing either, as important military and civilian Docks both Portsmouth and Southampton were repeatedly heavily bombed but there was little of military value in Brighton to go after.
Opportunist raids to disrupt life down below or dumping an unused bombload on anything vaguely English on the way back over the Channel would have been more like it.
Thanks! I will read that book. Have you read Ben MacIntyre's books? Very interesting, particularly Double Cross.
I say, cracking read chaps, what,what? Absolutely top-hole. Thanks for posting Old Boy.
Why do you clowns open these threads if all you can post is crap like this?
Ah well, another one for my Ignore list.....
Have read Agent Zigzig and Operation Mincemeat, both fascinating, haven't got around to Double Cross as yet.
I hope you enjoy Most Dangerous Enemy, I have been interested in the BoB for around 40 years or so and must have around 50 or so books which relate to it and it is the best one in my opinion.
The out of print After the Battle Book The Battle of Britain - Then and Now is also a favourite but very expensive if you can find a copy. I paid £60 for mine around five years ago and it is a massive (718 pages!) hardback which details all of the RAF Airfields used in the BoB in 1940 (and then shows them postwar) and also has a complete day-by-day list of casualties on both sides and how and where they were shot down including crash site and salvage details where they are available.
Very sobering when you look at the ages of those concerned.
Have read Agent Zigzig and Operation Mincemeat, both fascinating, haven't got around to Double Cross as yet.
I hope you enjoy Most Dangerous Enemy, I have been interested in the BoB for around 40 years or so and must have around 50 or so books which relate to it and it is the best one in my opinion.
The out of print After the Battle Book The Battle of Britain - Then and Now is also a favourite but very expensive if you can find a copy. I paid £60 for mine around five years ago and it is a massive (718 pages!) hardback which details all of the RAF Airfields used in the BoB in 1940 (and then shows them postwar) and also has a complete day-by-day list of casualties on both sides and how and where they were shot down including crash site and salvage details where they are available.
Very sobering when you look at the ages of those concerned.
Have read Agent Zigzig and Operation Mincemeat, both fascinating, haven't got around to Double Cross as yet.
I hope you enjoy Most Dangerous Enemy, I have been interested in the BoB for around 40 years or so and must have around 50 or so books which relate to it and it is the best one in my opinion.
The out of print After the Battle Book The Battle of Britain - Then and Now is also a favourite but very expensive if you can find a copy. I paid £60 for mine around five years ago and it is a massive (718 pages!) hardback which details all of the RAF Airfields used in the BoB in 1940 (and then shows them postwar) and also has a complete day-by-day list of casualties on both sides and how and where they were shot down including crash site and salvage details where they are available.
Very sobering when you look at the ages of those concerned.
Another vote for "The Most Dangerous Enemy" from me - a superb book which analyses things from many angles. I think that in this book is stated the the German Navy considered that the day the war was lost was the 3rd September 1939.
With regard to operation Sealion is there a book which critically analyses the whole thing? From various websites there seems to be a view that using Rhine Barges, suitable for inland waters, towed in numbers by tugs, was not a very sound plan (the wash from a passing vessel of any size could have sunk them); also the Luftwaffe didn't have the weapons or planes designed for sinking large vessels at sea.
That's not my understanding of it. I don't think they were ever anywhere near being able to invade us.
With regard to operation Sealion is there a book which critically analyses the whole thing?
Yes a very good read.. and how did they turn out when they arrived here ?
Made the ladies lives a good sight more interesting I guess... lol