Bültmann & Gerriets
Birmingham at War, 1939-45
von Julie Phillips
Verlag: Pen & Sword Books
Reihe: Your Towns & Cities in World War Two
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ISBN: 978-1-4738-6699-7
Erschienen am 24.01.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 208 Seiten

Preis: 5,34 €

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Biografische Anmerkung
Klappentext

Julie Phillips has always had a fascination with the past and in particular how our social history shapes and influences our present and our future. People are stories, and she loves nothing better than going out and talking to people as part of her research. She writes books that give people a voice and an opportunity to tell their stories within the context of what was happening both locally and nationally.
Based in Shropshire, she has had a varied working life including nurse, and teaching assistant. She now writes short stories, articles and historical non-fiction, continuing to see her work published in a variety of publications.



Barely 17 years after the Great War that had brought Britain to its knees, the country was once again asked to make sacrifices and give their all to the war effort. With its strong industrial background, Birmingham was already geared to help manufacture the vehicles that could be adapted for war use, and with the threat of the German Luftwaffe screaming across the skies, it was only right that the production of planes, most notably the spitfire, was ramped up to help protect the British public.While many of its men and women were involved in the forces abroad, many more stayed behind to defend the city, with inhabitants risking their lives by taking up fire hoses, first aid kits, manning antiaircraft guns and positioning barrage balloons in order to save others from the devastating destruction of the Blitz. Meanwhile, the city's children were separated from their families to escape the worst of the bombing and would return from their adventures changed: not all host evacuee families were as kind or as welcoming to their charges as it would appear.Yet not everyone was so patriotic and keen to do their bit, and the opportunity for crime and to fiddle the rations with black market goods was rife. Not even Government issue equipment was off limits, as one Birmingham gang of sandbag thieves demonstrated.For Birmingham, the Second World War was a time of great hardship and sacrifice and the hard work continued for many years after, as its people painstakingly rebuilt parts of the bomb-damaged city.


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