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Second World War
The Second World War (1939-45) was the amalgamation of two conflicts, one starting in Asia as the Second Sino-Japanese War, and the other beginning in Europe with the Invasion of Poland. It resulted in more than 60 million deaths - making it the deadliest conflict in human history.
Britain declared war on Germany on September 3, 1939. The country had been expecting war throughout what had been a long, hot summer and many preparations had been made leading up to this day.
The extended school summer holiday saw furious activity in the deserted school playgrounds and public parks. Mechanical excavators were busy digging trenches in these playgrounds, in almost every city park, and in many sports grounds. (People were also digging Anderson shelters and Morrison Shelters at their own homes).
The aim of all this activity was to provide underground refuges for the population. This war would bring a new threat – aerial attack by bombs of 500kg and more – the front line was not to be a muddy field in some far-off land. These trenches were to be known as 'Public Underground Air Raid Shelters'.
Some shelters were basic, offering merely protection from the German bombers overhead and somewhere to sit and answer the call of nature. Others rose to the luxury of bunks and a canteen.
By late 1940, virtually everybody living in a town or city, was hopefully no more than five minutes from an underground refuge. These air raid shelters would be no protection against a direct hit (as would be so painfully proved later in the war) but would give excellent protection against a near miss and perhaps more importantly against flying debris such as roof slates, masonry, glass and shrapnel.
More than 61 nations were involved in the fighting and 100 million soldiers were mobilised.
The main starting points of the Second World War are generally held to be the German invasion of Poland, as well as the Japanese attacks on China, the United States, and the British and Dutch colonies. All of the attacks resulted from the leadership of authoritarian ruling elites in Germany and Japan.
Germany and France had been struggling for dominance in Continental Europe for fifty years, and fought two previous wars, the Franco-Prussian War, and the First World War. Meanwhile the power of the Soviet Union threatened to eclipse them both as industrialisation spread to this massive country.
World War I had been a pre-emptive strike by Germany against what was then the Russian Empire, but it ended in disaster for Germany with millions dead, the loss of some peripheral territory, and economic hardships.
In the six years leading up to the Second World War, Adolf Hitler, leading the Nazi Party, took power in Germany and eliminated its democratic government, the Weimar Republic. Hitler's goal was to invade and conquer lands around Germany, and to make them German. He railed against Communists and ethnic minorities, such as Jews. After taking power, he prepared Germany for another war with large political rallies and speeches.
The Spanish Civil War, between 1936 and 1939, saw a democratic government supported largely by the Soviet Union and other members of the League of Nations get overthrown by a Nazi-supported Nationalist party lead by General Franco.
The British and French governments followed a policy of appeasement to try and avoid a new European war. They felt the huge death tolls of the First World War meant there was no appetite for further conflict. This policy culminated in the Munich Agreement in 1938, in which the seemingly inevitable outbreak of the war was averted when Britain and France agreed to Germany's annexation and immediate occupation of the German-speaking regions of Czechoslovakia. In exchange for this, Hitler gave his word that Germany would make no further territorial claims in Europe.
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain declared that the agreement represented "peace for our time."
In March 1939, Germany invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia, effectively killing any notions of appeasement and leading to the outbreak of the Second World War.
VE Day - Victory in Europe - was declared on May 8, 1945. VJ Day - Victory in Japan - was declared on August 15, 1945.
Click on the link below to listen to Glenna Newbold's memories of Melbourne during the war, including the time bombs were dropped on the town, and recollections of Melbourne's market gardeners.
Pages linking here
- 'Fressingfield' - Littleover's 'Secret House' Revealed
- 1940s: 60 years since misery of the 47 big freeze
- 1940s: Derbeians love royal visits
- 1940s: The Derby Jack kissed goodbye 57 years ago
- 1940s: The days of steam radio and nine-inch TV screens
- 1950s: A great life on the ocean waves
- 1950s: City parachutist leapt into Suez Crisis action
- 1950s: Do you remember day the earth moved?
- 1950s: God Save Queen Elizabeth II
- 1950s: It was all for one and one for all in the Last Drop over Egypt during Operation Musketeer
- 1950s: RAF's 6 Squadron led attack in the Suez zone
- 1950s: Rock 'n' Roll stars killed in plane crash
- 1950s: Train, plane and car crashes claim scores of lives
- 1960s: Kennedy elected as Presidential candidate
- 60s - The Swinging Sixties
- A waiting game as friends went to war, one by one...
- Abba tunes kept Slix chicks’ sewing machines whirring
- Airship crashed just four days after visiting Derby
- Allenton: The changing face of Allenton
- Ashover: History project
- Ashover: Pigs were killed for black market
- Athletics - A potted History of the Derby club
- Belper: Town was at heart of industrial revolution
- Bemrose and Ling: Solicitors mark 70 years' service
- Beresford, Frank: Derby artist painted by Royalty
- Binge, Ronald
- Binge, Ronald: Ronald was British light music maestro
- Binge, Ronald: Ronnie created the Mantovani sound
- Bowled over by fantastic turn-out for the Aussies
- Brewery worker worked with SAS sending coded messages from a candlelit Greek cavern
- Castle, Barbara: Firebrand MP who wanted 'jam today'
- Chellaston: The history of Chellaston
- Christian, Roy: Lovable historian Uncle Roy will be sadly missed
- Christmas: Cockerel capers down on the farm
- Cobblers: Did you know the Crewe Street Cobbler?
- Colvin, Sir Howard - the man who excavated Dale Abbey
- Courage of disfigured Derbyshire servicemen
- Dad built longest PoW tunnel
- Dakota DC3: One, two, three push that plane!
- Darley Park: Tree that prompts special memories for former West End youngster
- Derby's oldest travel agency organised trips on first trains, then boats and then planes
- Derby: Open your eyes to Derby, the city of curving Modernist lines
- Derby: Where the streets have strange names
- Derby Carnival: Mace-bearer at the last pre-war carnival
- Derby County: A Christmas game to remember in wartime Derby
- Derby County: A real class act
- Derby County: Derby's 'Wembley of the North'
- Derby County: It could only happen at Derby County
- Derby County: Meet the Derby Reds and Forest Rams
- Derby County - Peter Ramage Remembered
- Derby Racecourse: The rich history of Derby's lost racetrack
- Derbyshire: Worst floods of the century
- Docker, Lady Norah: Artificial blonde in search of stardom
- Douglas Bar - The Footballer, the Jockey and a Mystery Name
- Duffield: Boy, Oh Boy and other village characters
- Duffield: Carnival day cancelled
- E W Grimes And Co Ltd: Granddaughter loved the shop
- E W Grimes And Co Ltd: Grimes was the last of its kind
- Elliot, Harry: Batsman died in accident
- Estate boasts half a century of community spirit and great hidden talents
- F W Hampshires: Sugar dust, fish glue and grease
- Fields and woods were our wartime playground
- First World War misery inspired injured soldier to become a doctor, easing the suffering of thousands
- Following dad's footsteps into the cotton mill
- Former waitress recalls the little teashop as a homely, happy place to work in the late 1940s
- Greengrocer: Celebrating the market charter
- H.M.S. Derbyshire - Diamond Vessel Did Her Duty
- HISTORY OF DENBY POTTERY
- Half a century at the Midland Hotel
- Headline History
- Hilton, John Buxton: Peak was scene of crimes
- Hilton, Lt-Col Sir Peter - War hero and Lord Lieutenant of Derbyshire
- Knight, Dame Laura
- Manufacturing: Bustling busy Derby ensured that business back in the dynamic 1940s was booming
- Maschwitz, Eric - His Nightingale Still Sings
- Mining: From school to life underground - the first day down the pit at the age of 15
- Netherlea: Pottery business funded beautiful mansion
- Newton Solney: Castle folly landed squire in hot water
- Nobel Laureates: They helped make world a safer place
- Nobody's blushes were spared while filming Women in Love nude scenes
- Nun's Green: A Return of a Former Resident of the Priory of the Convent of St Mary de Pratis?
- Nuns in Derby - The Enemy Within
- Obolensky, Alexander - 'Prince of Long Eaton' and Rugby Union Great
- Offilers' Brewery - A lost Derby pint
- Our war: Lady Hilton's amazing story
- Parents bid an anxious farewell to youngsters
- Police
- Post Office: Snow fell during pit disaster
- Proud record of family with seven serving Sherwood Foresters
- Pub landlady who made her mark in a man's world
- Repton: Basil Rathbone's old school house is given a 21st century revamp
- Shattering shrapnel from our guns was lethal danger
- Sherwood Foresters
- Soo, Frank - Derbyshire's Famous 'Chinaman'
- Stanton Ironworks: Derbyshire's traditional industries hit by global competition
- Tennis - Allestree Woodlands Tennis Club
- The heavy metal men of Brown's
- The last of the Shakespearean Lauries recalls her family's love affair with the Bard
- The stories that made the headlines in 1974
- The story of the best WW2 British tank
- The taxi business that Jack built in a car park hut
- Theatre stages last curtain call
- Thorntons
- Thrower, Percy: Percy was the forerunner of TV's gardening celebrities
- Thurman And Malin: Store was held in high esteem
- Transport History: Pictures tell story of change
- Trolleybuses offered us a great night out before the war years
- Unforgettable 30s
- WW2
- WWI: Zeppelin was first to bomb Derby
- WWII
- WWII: 'Never let such tyranny happen again'
- WWII: ATC cadets trophy will keep lost airmans name alive
- WWII: Airborne assault on bridge too far
- WWII: Army were trained in tracklaying at King's Newton
- WWII: Bombing raid left Bernard bruised – thanks to his mum
- WWII: Brewer’s mistress and Spitfire story
- WWII: Cabbage patch army beat the rationing blues during wartime
- WWII: Childhood was a case of make do and mend
- WWII: Christmas would never be the same again
- WWII: During the war you ate everything on a pig except its squeal
- WWII: Dutch children head home
- WWII: Evacuated to Draycott because Mr Hitler ate children for his lunch
- WWII: Fleeing the Russians in 1945
- WWII: Glider mission on a wing and a prayer
- WWII: Japanese leaders finally surrender
- WWII: Mum's Army turned into crack shots and Morse code experts
- WWII: My lucky escape when avenue was bombed
- WWII: Never a dull moment at the mill
- WWII: Palestine posting after the war
- WWII: RAF man won U.S. bravery award
- WWII: RC church renamed to honour martyr of Nazi camp
- WWII: Remembering the ‘forgotten corps’
- WWII: Rich mixture of waste land and rural beauty
- WWII: Robin Hood, Roy Rodgers
- WWII: Serving in India was not all curry and chips
- WWII: Siberia came first in long war journey
- WWII: Stories from an air raid shelter
- WWII: The brother who survived the war to die on an iron lung in a foreign land
- WWII: The ups and downs of a wartime messenger boy
- WWII: Top secret photos reveal a grim success
- WWII: Total recall of Derby’s first bomb 60 years on
- Walking: Be prepared
- Wartime 'holiday at home' better than exotic hotspot
- When they were in, they were in and when they were out, they were out and it was all superb!
- Where was Derby's Becket well?
- Why you should never offer to be 'it' in a prewar playground game of baste the bear
- Wilkins, Ray: The jet-setting teacher-player
- Wilson, Enid: Golfing roll of honour
- Women working in a man’s world at Ordnance Depots
- World War 2
- World War II
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