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    • Invasion of Poland and Declaration of War. Six years prior to the invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, the Nazis came to power in Germany and Hitler began retaking land that had once been part of Germany including parts of Czechoslovakia.
    • Winston Churchill Becomes Prime Minister. While Chamberlain has been roundly criticized for the Munich Agreement, he also worked to prepare England for the war ahead.
    • Battle of Dunkirk. After the Phone War ended, Hitler invaded France on May 10, 1940. Germany’s lightning-fast offensive strategy (known as the “blitzkrieg”) quickly drove back Allied forces until the British were driven back to Dunkirk, France by which time the UK forces planned to evacuate back to the British Isles.
    • Battle of Britain. With Britain having retreated home, Germany began its plan to invade the United Kingdom, leading to the beginning of the Battle of Britain on July 10, 1940.
    • Don’t Forget to Tip. While the German V1 bombs did a great amount of damage to London and other parts of Britain during The Blitz, pilots devised a method of sending them off course by intercepting them in flight and tipping the bombs’ wings with their own.
    • Hard to Kill. Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart was a British Army officer who had served in both the Boer War and WWI before WWII broke out. Over the course of his career, he had been shot in the face, stomach, ankle, leg, hip and ear.
    • Unleash the Death Ray! Or maybe not. Robert Watson-Watt started working on a “death ray” that would use radio waves to destroy airplanes in 1935. It wasn’t quite successful at its primary purpose, but soon it was discovered that there was a use for it, and Watson-Watt’s “death ray” evolved into what we know as radar.
    • The Last Prisoner. Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s Deputy Fuhrer, attempted to fly to Scotland in 1941 in an unsanctioned and last-ditch peace attempt with the UK.
    • The Battle of Britain
    • The Unsinkable Ship
    • The North African Campaign
    • British Intelligence
    • The British Empire
    • The Royal Navy

    Between June and October 1940, the RAF engaged in a deadly battle over the skies of southern Englandwith wave after wave of Luftwaffe bombers and fighter planes. At stake was the supremacy of the air and, in turn, the survival of the United Kingdom. Following the fall of France, the only country still standing in the way of Hitler’s total dominance...

    Free from occupying forces, Britain became an unsinkable ship, able to launch constant bombing raids against German industrial, military, and civilian targets. This hampered the Germans’ ability to fight the war effectively and severely lowered enemy morale. As well as being a base for both British raids on the German homeland and its military inte...

    Unable to fight in continental Europe, the British instead turned their attention to North Africa, fighting several battles against the Italians and the Germans to drive them from the continent. The battles fought between General Bernard Montgomery and his opposite number, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, culminated in Rommel’s defeat in the Battle of E...

    The British knew they hadn’t much hope of taking the fight directly to the Germans at the start of the war, but what they did have was an intelligence network that was second to none. The full weight of British intelligence was thrown into the war effort and produced astonishing results that proved vital. The Special Operations Executive (SOE), for...

    With an empire stretching from Canada to Australia, Britain was able to raise a fighting force the Germans and the Japanese could never hope to match. In India alone, Britain raised an army of 1.4 million troops who went on to play vital roles in both the European and Pacific theatres. While many people see the Pacific as primarily a war between Ja...

    Of course, it wasn’t just on land that Britain made an invaluable contribution to the war. At sea, the gigantic Royal Navyplayed a pivotal role in defeating the Axis powers from day one of the conflict to the very end of the war. In Europe and the Middle East, Royal Navy blockades confined the Italian and German navies to port due to a chronic shor...

  1. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 – 1945) – US President 1932 – 1945. Roosevelt was sympathetic to the Allied cause and offered generous war loan to Britain. After Pearl Harbour, he led the US in declaring war on both Japan and Germany.

  2. Jun 2, 2019 · World War Two was historys biggest conflict. To help guide you through some of the major events involved we have compiled a list of 100 facts across ten pertinent topic areas. Whilst far from comprehensive, this provides a great starting point from which to explore the conflict and its world-altering ramifications.

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  4. Nov 9, 2022 · Which event is generally considered to be the first belligerent act of World War II? Germany’s attack on Poland is considered to be the most belligerent act of the war. Who proclaimed December 7, 1941, “a date which will live in infamy”? Franklin D. Roosevelt made this famous statement.