Old UK

Breathtaking Color Photos Show What Life Was Like in Britain During the Second World War

When Britain went to war on 3 September 1939 there was none of the ‘flag-waving patriotism’ of August 1914. The British people were now resigned to the fact that Hitler had to be stopped by force.

The first eight months of the war were a time of official unwarranted optimism and bureaucratic muddle. Many early wartime measures such as the blackout and evacuation proved highly unpopular. But this ‘Phoney War’ was soon followed by the ‘bracing defeat’ of Dunkirk and the fall of France in June 1940.
For the next year, under Winston Churchill’s inspiring and resolute leadership, Britain with its Empire stood alone against Hitler, until they were joined by two powerful allies, the Soviet Union and the United States.

But for the next five years the British had to endure the bombing of their towns and cities in the Blitz, as well as attacks from flying bombs and rockets. In all 60,595 civilians were killed and 86,182 seriously injured. Rationing of food began in January 1940 and clothes in June 1941. By 1943, virtually every household item was either in short supply and had to be queued for, or was unobtainable.

The British were the most totally mobilized of all the major belligerents and there was a great and genuine community of spirit in wartime Britain which often transcended class and other barriers. But there was also an almost universal feeling, exemplified by the popularity of the 1942 Beveridge Report, that after victory the country could not go back to pre-war social conditions.

VE Day found Britain exhausted, drab and in poor shape, but justly proud of its unique role in gaining the Allied victory.

Wartime fashion, June 1943
Oxford Street, London, c.1942
I C I plant Billingham
Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson, 1940
British school children, 1940
Anderson shelter, 1940
Comfortable Luv, 1940
Avranches, Normandy, August 1944
London window shopping, 1941
Henley- on- Thames, May 1944
Hambleden, May 1944
London, 1941
Stanstead, 1941
London, 1941
Marlow, Buckinghamshire, May 1944
London Park, 1941
London, 1941
Weekly rounds, 1944
Farmhands, 1945
White Cliffs of Dover, 1944
Cambridge street
London, July 1944
Horse power, 1945
Unknown river, 1944
Bomb damage, July 1944
Land army girls, 1944
Refugees
Two Guernsey boys, 1940
Unknown town in Kent, 1945
Stradford-upon-Avon, April 1944
Moreton – in – Marsh, May 1944
London, 1944
Hambleden, May 1944
Roadiside well, 1944
Stradford-upon-Avon, May 1944
High Street, Eye, Suffolk, May 1945
Royston station, 1944
Lower Regent street, 1945
Farmall tractor, Spring 1943
Oxford street, May 1944
The Queen at Buckingham Palace, 1945
Henley-on- Thames, 1944
Moreton-in- Marsh, May 1944
Trafalgar Square
Albert Memorial, April 1944
Stratford-upon-Avon, April 1944
Winston Churchill, 1943
Daffodil pickers, March 1943
Hyde Park, May 1944
River Avon, 1944
Bomb damage, September 1940
Colchester, 1942
Day nursery, Hatfield, June 1943
During the Blitz
You taking my snap Sir
Buckingham Palace, 1944
Wartime fasion, June 1943
Piccadilly Circus, 1945
Family Butcher, Luton, 1944
German Prisoners of War
Bomb damage in London, 1944
Bishop’s Stortford, Essex, June 1944

(via Imperial War Museums)

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