Traveling Tuesday: Buckingham Palace
“It all happened so quickly that we only had time to
look foolishly at each other when the scream hurtled past us and exploded with
a tremendous crash in the quadrangle.” So said the Queen Mother, Queen
Elizabeth about her experience during the September 13, 1940 attack made on
Buckingham Palace by the Germans during WWII. She went on to say her “knees
trembled a bit,” but she was “pleased by the behavior of their servants, some
of whom were injured.”
Hitler was determined to break the morale of the
English people, and used a period of incessant bombing that is now known at The
Blitz to try to do so. Between September 7, 1940 and May 10, industrial and
civilian centers. They began with London, specifically with Buckingham Palace.
The first of sixteen hits to the Palace and its
grounds (nine of which were direct hits) was on September 8th.
Fortunately that bomb was harmless. The second, which fell near the swimming
pool, came the next day. The third attack, on September 13th found
its mark. A single pilot specifically targeted the Palace with a stick of five
high explosive bombs. Two hit the inner quadrangle, one hit the Royal Chapel,
and the remaining two fell on the forecourt and roadway between the gates and
the Victoria Memorial.
The King and Queen were in residence at the time,
having publicly declared they would not leave London or flee to Canada as
suggested by the Foreign Office. Elizabeth stated, “The children will not leave
unless I do so. I shall not leave unless their Father does, the King will not
leave the country in any circumstances, whatever.”
Two more attacks occurred that month, followed by one
October and again in November of that year. A tantalizing target, Buckingham
Palace would be bombed several more times before the end of the war. The
building was damaged, but the British spirit that Hitler hoped to smash proved
to be indomitable.
Bombing Map of Buckingham Palace |
No comments:
Post a Comment