Edinburgh at War, 1939–45 Edinburgh at War, 1939–45
    • $8.99

Publisher Description

Scotland was of grave strategic importance during the war because of its geographical position and its capital was the location of a significant number of important military and civil organizations. Edinburgh Castle became the HQ of the Scottish Home Forces whilst the Forth was a vitally important port and was heavily protected even before the start of the war. Its importance was marked by its attracting the first air raid of the war on mainland Britain when a force of German bombers was sent to attack naval shipping in the Forth on 16th October 1939. The raid was intercepted by the RAF which shot down at least two bombers and the entire action was witnessed by many civilians on the ground. The raid also caused the first civilian casualties when two women were injured in Edinburgh and two men machine-gunned in Portobello. Thousands lined the streets days later for the funeral of two of the Luftwaffe airmen.No member of the population of Edinburgh escaped the war, whether it was the huge numbers of men and women from the area who came forward for service in the military or in roles such as the Home Guard, ARP services, nursing, working in vital war industries, struggling to maintain a household under strict rationing and the stresses of wartime life, or children evacuated from the city to the rural areas of Scotland to escape the expected bombing campaign (even though the Archbishop of Edinburgh called for their return if there was insufficient provision of religious instruction in reception areas).Edinburgh was also home to a sizable Italian community which was badly affected by internment and the subsequent tight restrictions on movement and civil rights. The Italian community was also subjected to violent attacks when rioting mobs attacked Italian owned business throughout the city (although one family business was spared because one of the sons was known as a fanatical supporter of Hibs).Edinburgh at War 1939-1945 poignantly commemorates the efforts and achievements of Edinburgh: workers, fighters, families divided, all surviving astounding tests.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2018
January 30
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
216
Pages
PUBLISHER
Pen & Sword Books
SELLER
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
SIZE
15.8
MB
South East Northumberland at War 1939–45 South East Northumberland at War 1939–45
2019
Newcastle at War 1939–45 Newcastle at War 1939–45
2019
Barnsley at War 1939–45 Barnsley at War 1939–45
2019
Edinburgh in the Great War Edinburgh in the Great War
2016
Glasgow in the Great War Glasgow in the Great War
2016
Wirral at War Wirral at War
2022
Northumberland Northumberland
2018
The Boy Scouts in the Great War The Boy Scouts in the Great War
2021
Middlesbrough at War 1939–45 Middlesbrough at War 1939–45
2022
Orkney and Scapa Flow at War 1939–45 Orkney and Scapa Flow at War 1939–45
2020
Glasgow at War, 1939–45 Glasgow at War, 1939–45
2019
Feeding the Nation in World War II Feeding the Nation in World War II
2023
City of London at War 1939–45 City of London at War 1939–45
2020
Birmingham at War, 1939–45 Birmingham at War, 1939–45
2018
Essex at War, 1939–45 Essex at War, 1939–45
2017
Isle of Man at War, 1939–45 Isle of Man at War, 1939–45
2018
Middlesbrough at War 1939–45 Middlesbrough at War 1939–45
2022
Reading at War, 1939–45 Reading at War, 1939–45
2020