Every bomb that landed on London during the blitz of 1940/41 was recorded and the statistics were kept at the National Archives. It's now available online as a digital map.
That page doesn't display correctly for me in IE8. Still.. an amazing bit of kit
I noted the warning that they take no responsibility for the accuracy of information meaning a bomb that fell 'there' may not have actually fell 'there' but hey, who cares. It's gotta be close enough
ATB
DaveB
DaveB wrote:I noted the warning that they take no responsibility for the accuracy of information meaning a bomb that fell 'there' may not have actually fell 'there' but hey, who cares. It's gotta be close enough
It doesn't matter so much now. It probably mattered more at the time, especially if you were underneath one
Sorry about the link, I picked it up on the iPad so haven't checked it on a PC browser. I'll see if I can find a better link later on.
EDIT: If you've visited my Bomber Command website you may have heard this WWII recording taken from the receiving end of an air raid. It's only 2.5 mins but quite terrifying.
Some great photos on that site taken in the various boroughs,
Funny enough the Memsahib and i were only talking yesterday about when we were youngsters after the war and as i was born in 1941 in Kent and do not remember that much about it i do remember playing with those Gas Masks and getting the green crystals out of the large round bases of them, i suppose we thought they were like Diamonds!!!
Thanks for the link.
Roger.
Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.
I wonder the accuracy. I used to live on land which was once Hornchurch aerodrome. According to the map no bombs dropped there at all which I find hard to believe.
speedbird591 wrote:Every bomb that landed on London during the blitz of 1940/41 was recorded and the statistics were kept at the National Archives. It's now available online as a digital map.