- 07 Sep 2024 12:58
#15324263
September 7, Saturday
Goering brings RAF to breaking point
Britain’s Fighter Command has reached a crisis point as it faces increasingly ferocious attacks on its airfields and RDF stations and mounting losses in the air. Goering, desperate to finish off the RAF fighters, is using large numbers of fighters, which RDF cannot distinguish from bombers, to tempt them into battle.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding’s tactics are to refuse battle with the fighters and to concentrate on the bombers, and he is feeding in his planes in a miserly fashion in order to preserve his command. But while he has enough planes, he doesn’t have enough men. Newly-trained pilots with only twenty hours’ flying time in Spitfires are thrown into battle and too often shot down on their first sortie. Dowding has lost eleven of his 46 squadron commanders and 39 of his 97 flight commanders, and those who survive are physically exhausted.
But the RAF doesn’t yet know that Goering has chosen this very moment, when the fortunes of Fighter Command are at such a low ebb, to switch his main attack from British airfields to the cities. He doesn’t know that he is handing the RAF breathing space on a plate.
Bomber attack brings widespread devastation and 450 deaths
London’s dockland is on fire tonight after a massive daylight raid in which more than 300 tons of high explosive and incendiary bombs rain on the capital, with the RAF seemingly unable to stop the death and destruction which falls from a stately procession of bombers onto the streets of East London. It is feared that up to 450 people have died, with about 1,600 injured.
Goering directs the attack from a cliff top in France, whence he watches 350 bombers escorted by 650 fighters stream across the Channel. Broadcasting from his HQ, he says he can see waves of planes heading for England.
It seems that this time, the RAF is wrong-footed despite Enigma warnings of an attack on London. There have been raids on Hawkinge airfield this morning and, thinking that the new wave of raiders is heading for airfields north of London, the 11 Group controller keeps his squadrons north of the capital, not realizing that London is the real target until it is too late. Eventually, 21 out of 23 airborne squadrons manage to get into action and shoot down 41 German planes for the loss of 25, but by now, the damage has been done.
The first bombs set fire to bonded warehouses. Blazing rum, paint, and sugar float on the Thames. Many people have to be evacuated by boat. “Send all the pumps you’ve got,” pleads one fire officer, “the whole bloody world’s on fire.” One of the problems facing the firefighters is that the level of the Thames has fallen during the dry summer, and they have difficulty getting their pumps to work. Later the sirens sound again, and in the night 247 German aircraft attack the capital, dropping 352 tons of high explosive and 440 canisters of incendiary bombs.
“Ack-ack” guns lift spirits in shelters
As the capital experiences its first big air raid today, Londoners begin to learn the sounds of battle. The sound that pleases them most is that of anti-aircraft guns, but only 97 guns are on site in the London area, compared to the 2,232 heavy guns and one-third of the 1,860 light guns sought when the war began. “Ack-ack” guns, as they are called, range from small caliber Lewis machine guns to big Royal Navy weapons mounted on railway trucks. They throw up a storm of hot metal, forcing the raiders higher, but one drawback is the shower of shell splinters raining down on the streets, where a helmet is essential during a raid. Yet civilians in shelters such as church crypts and coal cellars like the sound of the guns; it makes them feel less like passive targets.
British forces put on invasion alert
A few hours after the widespread bombing of London’s docks, with 2,000 Londoners dead or injured and the whole area engulfed by flames, all railway links are blocked, and the decision is taken at GHQ Home Forces to send out the codeword “Cromwell”: invasion imminent. Home Guard and regular troops are called out, church bells ring, and some bridges are blown.
Churchill has been warning the Chiefs of Staff that if an invasion is to be tried, it cannot be long delayed because the weather may break at any time. For the past few weeks, hundreds of self-propelled barges have been observed moving down from German and Dutch harbors to parts of northern France. They have come under heavy bombardment from the RAF and the Royal Navy. But the massive bombing attack on London docks, which British forces interpret as a prelude to an attempted German landing, doesn’t appear to have been followed up by any movement of the invasion fleet. One theory is that the German hope that their air raids on civilian targets will cause such panic and chaos that invasion will be unnecessary.
How the Germans plan to seize and subdue southern England
The German armed forces have drawn up detailed plans for invading the British Isles and consolidating their positions after the initial landings. Operation Sealion, as the Germans call it, entails the landing of a first wave of thirteen divisions at a number of points on the south coast, from Ramsgate in the east to Lyme Regis in the west. Airborne troops will also be used. The Germans would then move inland to establish themselves on a line eastward from Gloucester to south of Colchester. By then, they believe Britain will have surrendered and a military government will be set up. But the difficulty of mounting an invasion without air superiority worries the chiefs of staff.
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—Edmund Burke