All language subtitles for Lancaster.2022.BRRip.x264-ION10

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian Download
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch Download
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek Download
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew Download
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese Download
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:35,494 --> 00:00:38,163 Engine rumbles softly 2 00:01:42,894 --> 00:01:45,689 Soft rumbling continues 3 00:02:50,170 --> 00:02:53,632 Engine roars 4 00:03:04,434 --> 00:03:06,937 Peter Kelsey: I fought my war from five miles up. 5 00:03:08,772 --> 00:03:12,943 I dropped at one time seven or eight tons of bombs on somewhere 6 00:03:13,902 --> 00:03:17,155 came back, had me breakfast, out on the booze the next day 7 00:03:17,239 --> 00:03:18,240 thought nothing of it. 8 00:03:19,700 --> 00:03:23,161 It was totally another world. 9 00:03:28,208 --> 00:03:33,422 But I realised that what I had done was fundamentally wrong. 10 00:03:36,091 --> 00:03:39,010 But the circumstances were such that we did it. 11 00:03:41,096 --> 00:03:44,266 And I can't reconcile those two viewpoints. 12 00:03:44,349 --> 00:03:46,268 I just... I can't reconcile them. 13 00:03:52,482 --> 00:03:55,444 Rusty waughman: I was 20 years old, very naive. 14 00:03:57,154 --> 00:03:59,906 Didn't have any experience of life at all. 15 00:04:01,324 --> 00:04:04,369 You knew you were facing death all the time. 16 00:04:04,786 --> 00:04:07,372 Night after night, after night, after night. 17 00:04:09,082 --> 00:04:11,418 But it's just a thing you accepted. 18 00:04:16,173 --> 00:04:17,716 Johnny Johnson: A pet aversion of mine 19 00:04:17,841 --> 00:04:20,510 it's what I call retrospective historians. 20 00:04:21,678 --> 00:04:25,515 Even now if I met one, I'd ask them just two questions... 21 00:04:26,516 --> 00:04:31,938 "Were you there, were you personally aware of the circumstances and conditions 22 00:04:32,022 --> 00:04:33,064 of that time?" 23 00:04:33,648 --> 00:04:38,278 The answer to both those questions is no, so keep your bloody mouth shut. 24 00:04:39,154 --> 00:04:42,115 Engine rumbles softly 25 00:04:45,494 --> 00:04:47,120 Ursula Van dam: We heard them coming. 26 00:04:47,913 --> 00:04:52,751 We heard the squadrons on their way to bomb our town. 27 00:04:54,127 --> 00:04:56,046 The Lancaster bombers at night. 28 00:05:00,383 --> 00:05:04,054 Bill purdy: There's no second prize in a war, you win it or you lose it. 29 00:05:04,471 --> 00:05:07,641 And all we could do in bomber command was to keep on bombing them 30 00:05:07,724 --> 00:05:09,351 and bombing them and bombing them 31 00:05:09,601 --> 00:05:11,061 until someone gives up. 32 00:05:14,648 --> 00:05:18,777 And the Lancaster played a big part in winning the war. 33 00:05:19,444 --> 00:05:21,238 It was the best of its day. 34 00:05:24,658 --> 00:05:27,327 And it brought us back alive. 35 00:05:50,225 --> 00:05:52,811 Turbines whir 36 00:05:57,524 --> 00:06:01,444 narrator: Today, five squadrons of royal air force typhoon fighters 37 00:06:01,528 --> 00:06:02,696 are based at con/ngsb y. 38 00:06:05,156 --> 00:06:08,535 They share the run ways with one of the most iconic aircraft 39 00:06:08,618 --> 00:06:10,495 in British aviation histoly. 40 00:06:12,038 --> 00:06:13,331 The Lancaster bomber. 41 00:06:16,585 --> 00:06:19,296 /t is one of only two that remain airworthy. 42 00:06:21,965 --> 00:06:23,633 Alan biffen: Looking back now 43 00:06:23,884 --> 00:06:29,055 I have to tell myself, "did I really fly one of those aeroplanes?" 44 00:06:29,848 --> 00:06:31,766 It's such a long time ago 45 00:06:32,392 --> 00:06:35,770 maybe it's all... Maybe it all happened to someone else 46 00:06:35,854 --> 00:06:38,982 and I'm just making it... making it up. 47 00:06:42,736 --> 00:06:46,615 Bill gould: It's a living thing and it was a living thing. 48 00:06:47,365 --> 00:06:50,160 There were times almost when she spoke to you. 49 00:06:50,952 --> 00:06:52,412 Or you felt she did. 50 00:06:53,622 --> 00:06:57,584 I could still go to her right now and press the right buttons I think. 51 00:06:58,877 --> 00:07:01,379 I'd love to. He laughs 52 00:07:04,549 --> 00:07:07,427 Bob leedham: Pure nostalgia, pure nostalgia. 53 00:07:07,969 --> 00:07:12,057 Every time I see it in the air I say "god, look at that. Beautiful." 54 00:07:12,641 --> 00:07:14,643 And there's no question about it 55 00:07:14,726 --> 00:07:20,148 it transformed bomber command by its pure operational capacity. 56 00:07:20,941 --> 00:07:23,526 It was an amazing, amazing aircraft. 57 00:07:27,238 --> 00:07:29,866 Narrator: The avro Lancaster was a crucial weapon 58 00:07:29,950 --> 00:07:31,952 in winning the war against Hitler. 59 00:07:35,121 --> 00:07:40,210 But before the bomber's arrival, britain was fighting for survival. 60 00:07:42,212 --> 00:07:45,715 Air raid siren wails 61 00:07:57,936 --> 00:08:00,271 Laurie Davies: I can still hear it sometimes. 62 00:08:02,565 --> 00:08:05,694 It's a whistle that gets louder and louder and louder 63 00:08:05,777 --> 00:08:08,363 and everything gets darker and darker. 64 00:08:08,446 --> 00:08:12,784 Bomb whistles 65 00:08:14,619 --> 00:08:16,162 then there was nothing left. 66 00:08:16,246 --> 00:08:18,331 Explosion booms 67 00:08:21,292 --> 00:08:24,462 my mum had gone into an Anderson shelter. 68 00:08:25,797 --> 00:08:27,340 When she came out 69 00:08:27,841 --> 00:08:33,054 she just went berserk and she felt the thud in the ground 70 00:08:33,763 --> 00:08:35,849 but of course to see her house gone... 71 00:08:49,320 --> 00:08:51,239 George Dunn: When the London blitz started 72 00:08:51,322 --> 00:08:54,784 I used to stand on the cliff at whitstable 73 00:08:54,993 --> 00:08:58,496 and could see all the German bombers, hordes of them 74 00:08:58,580 --> 00:09:00,331 coming up the thames estuary. 75 00:09:07,297 --> 00:09:10,592 Arthur duggan: They bombed about 22 mile of dockland. 76 00:09:11,009 --> 00:09:14,471 There were all timber wharfs and all that along the thames 77 00:09:14,846 --> 00:09:16,556 and they set them on fire. 78 00:09:18,600 --> 00:09:21,895 And then they just showered the bombs on the arsenal 79 00:09:22,062 --> 00:09:23,229 woolwich arsenal. 80 00:09:25,648 --> 00:09:28,443 I was in the auxiliary fire service 81 00:09:29,235 --> 00:09:31,112 and I thought, "well, bugger this". 82 00:09:31,446 --> 00:09:33,656 There was ammunition going off, you know? 83 00:09:34,407 --> 00:09:36,159 Exploding and all that. 84 00:09:40,121 --> 00:09:41,640 Benny Goodman: I can remember one night 85 00:09:41,664 --> 00:09:44,042 my father and I had to go down the fire escape 86 00:09:44,125 --> 00:09:49,255 because the bombers were so close and I trod on a huge piece of human flesh. 87 00:09:53,843 --> 00:09:57,180 And that was my... I suppose my induction to war. 88 00:10:05,772 --> 00:10:08,775 Narrator: For eight months, the bombs fell. 89 00:10:12,070 --> 00:10:17,742 London, liverpool, Birmingham, Glasgow and most notoriously, co vent/y 90 00:10:18,076 --> 00:10:19,953 were amongst those cities hit. 91 00:10:25,959 --> 00:10:29,337 In all, 43, 000 people were killed 92 00:10:33,883 --> 00:10:35,528 Peter: I thought, "well, if that's the game we're in 93 00:10:35,552 --> 00:10:36,886 that's the game we're in." 94 00:10:39,055 --> 00:10:42,934 You couldn't be one—sided otherwise it would have been over in no time. 95 00:10:43,017 --> 00:10:45,562 Air raid siren wails 96 00:10:57,991 --> 00:11:00,118 Jack Watson: I wanted... always wanted to fly 97 00:11:01,536 --> 00:11:04,289 so I told my dad I wanted to join the air force 98 00:11:04,747 --> 00:11:07,167 and of course he hit the roof. 99 00:11:08,668 --> 00:11:10,646 Elizabeth mortimer—cook: And I kept nagging my father 100 00:11:10,670 --> 00:11:12,839 to let me join the raf. 101 00:11:13,339 --> 00:11:16,843 Well, I wanted to be a plotter, one of Churchill's girls. 102 00:11:18,344 --> 00:11:20,889 David Fraser: Pilots training took anything up to a year 103 00:11:21,347 --> 00:11:25,476 navigators about nine months, and gunners about eight weeks. 104 00:11:26,227 --> 00:11:27,872 I thought, "hell, I don't want to miss the war" 105 00:11:27,896 --> 00:11:29,939 so I joined as a gunner. He laughs 106 00:11:30,940 --> 00:11:34,194 Bob: I think one of the factors is everyone was relatively young. 107 00:11:34,652 --> 00:11:37,572 And of course, when you're young, you want to really have a go at 'em 108 00:11:37,655 --> 00:11:40,617 and I think this was the attitude in many respects. 109 00:11:41,826 --> 00:11:46,206 Neil flanigan: I was the 39th man to join the royal air force in Jamaica. 110 00:11:47,165 --> 00:11:48,165 We were shipped out 111 00:11:48,708 --> 00:11:51,669 and I remember leaving Jamaica 112 00:11:53,087 --> 00:11:56,466 in the sunset, and seeing Jamaica fade away 113 00:11:56,716 --> 00:12:01,012 and I wondered if I would ever return. 114 00:12:03,389 --> 00:12:06,267 Engine rumbles 115 00:12:13,316 --> 00:12:17,570 Narrator: Raf fighter command had saved the count/y in its hour of need 116 00:12:19,572 --> 00:12:24,827 but in 7947, bomber command was not yet equipped to p/a y its part. 117 00:12:29,165 --> 00:12:33,836 There was no equivalent of the spitfire in the baf's bomber squadrons. 118 00:12:35,088 --> 00:12:40,051 Those aircraft they did have were slow and mostly out of date. 119 00:12:40,843 --> 00:12:43,805 Jo Lancaster: We flew in the Wellington bomber. 120 00:12:43,972 --> 00:12:49,310 It had Bristol Pegasus 18 engines and they were not powerful enough. 121 00:12:51,688 --> 00:12:54,232 So the result was that if you lost an engine 122 00:12:54,691 --> 00:12:57,360 there was only one way to go and that was downwards. 123 00:13:01,781 --> 00:13:06,661 David: Flying at night with no radar, weather conditions as they were 124 00:13:06,828 --> 00:13:09,414 sometime the winds were... Perhaps veered a bit 125 00:13:09,497 --> 00:13:12,792 and you could finish 30 miles off course. 126 00:13:14,210 --> 00:13:17,463 Hello Mac, where are we now? As though you're likely to know. 127 00:13:18,214 --> 00:13:19,841 Navigator: I can't find where we are. 128 00:13:20,049 --> 00:13:25,013 I'm not surprised at all that a lot of the bombs were way off target. 129 00:13:25,638 --> 00:13:26,638 Gunner: Left, left. 130 00:13:27,974 --> 00:13:28,850 Steady. 131 00:13:28,933 --> 00:13:32,895 In 1941, if you bombed a target and got within five miles of it 132 00:13:32,979 --> 00:13:34,772 you reckon that was a bloody good hit. 133 00:13:37,066 --> 00:13:41,529 Nick Nichols: And all the time the German defences were getting stronger. 134 00:13:43,781 --> 00:13:48,202 We went into this knowing that there was going to be losses 135 00:13:48,786 --> 00:13:53,624 and er, we just hoped it wasn't going to be us. 136 00:13:56,919 --> 00:14:01,341 David: We were caught in a cone of search lights, about 15 lights 137 00:14:01,841 --> 00:14:03,426 and they hammered hell out of us. 138 00:14:06,220 --> 00:14:07,680 My turret was on fire. 139 00:14:08,473 --> 00:14:09,891 Suddenly the navigator said 140 00:14:10,058 --> 00:14:12,268 "look out, Dave, for that fighter on the port quarter" 141 00:14:12,685 --> 00:14:14,685 and of course, went to swing the gun... He chuckles 142 00:14:15,104 --> 00:14:16,147 turret wouldn't move. 143 00:14:16,481 --> 00:14:17,982 Machine guns rati'le 144 00:14:18,066 --> 00:14:20,151 god, I could have wept with frustration. 145 00:14:20,234 --> 00:14:22,236 Bombs explode — David: I was useless. 146 00:14:23,654 --> 00:14:25,782 Ok chaps, don't worry. Everything's alright. 147 00:14:25,865 --> 00:14:27,785 David: Then we were given the orders to bail out. 148 00:14:27,825 --> 00:14:28,825 Anybody hurt? 149 00:14:28,910 --> 00:14:30,750 Crew member: The wireless operator's copped it. 150 00:14:34,374 --> 00:14:35,708 David: Once I landed 151 00:14:35,917 --> 00:14:38,669 I came across some buildings, and I thought they were farm buildings 152 00:14:39,629 --> 00:14:43,466 and then a door opened, and a shaft of light shot out 153 00:14:43,716 --> 00:14:45,134 and a voice said "halt!" 154 00:14:45,968 --> 00:14:48,721 And I put my hands up 155 00:14:49,263 --> 00:14:52,975 and it was a building occupied by searchlight crews. 156 00:14:53,893 --> 00:14:57,480 And we were regaled with cognac and coffee. 157 00:14:58,064 --> 00:15:00,274 And I remember one guy saying 158 00:15:00,358 --> 00:15:06,114 "don't worry, the war will soon be over, and our ftihrer will ride on a white horse 159 00:15:07,240 --> 00:15:09,700 up to Buckingham Palace and take occupation." 160 00:15:10,284 --> 00:15:12,370 We said, "wait and see". 161 00:15:16,332 --> 00:15:19,669 Narrator: David Fraser's captors did not have to wait too long. 162 00:15:25,967 --> 00:15:30,888 In the works were new aircraft that could take the blitz back to Berlin. 163 00:15:32,473 --> 00:15:33,975 Birds twiti'er 164 00:15:38,896 --> 00:15:42,150 I suppose, really, it's ironical that, er... 165 00:15:42,233 --> 00:15:47,113 How the lanc was developed almost accidentally. 166 00:15:52,577 --> 00:15:56,539 Narrator: Two of these new bombers, the stirling and halifax 167 00:15:56,831 --> 00:15:59,333 were already on order for the raf. 168 00:16:01,210 --> 00:16:03,671 A t aircraft builders a vro 169 00:16:03,880 --> 00:16:07,258 chief engineer boy Chadwick thought he could do better. 170 00:16:08,259 --> 00:16:10,970 A twin—engined aircraft called the Manchester. 171 00:16:12,305 --> 00:16:16,517 But its balls—boyce vulture engines were causing trouble. 172 00:16:18,478 --> 00:16:21,814 Bob: They were a completely revolutionary type of design 173 00:16:21,898 --> 00:16:23,483 but it was never successful. 174 00:16:24,901 --> 00:16:27,528 The minute they got airborne they got problems straight away. 175 00:16:28,112 --> 00:16:30,531 Nothing but engine failures, one after another. 176 00:16:32,033 --> 00:16:33,951 Narrator: Although already in production 177 00:16:34,076 --> 00:16:36,787 the fate of the Manchester hung in the balance. 178 00:16:42,210 --> 00:16:47,548 With the raf desperate for new bombers, Chadwick suggested a radical solution. 179 00:16:49,842 --> 00:16:55,389 He swapped the two fia wed vultures for four proven balls—boyce Merlins 180 00:16:56,098 --> 00:16:58,601 the same engine that powered the spitfire. 181 00:16:59,477 --> 00:17:03,189 And they were so amazed at the difference in performance 182 00:17:03,439 --> 00:17:08,402 and that's really how the Lancaster developed almost accidentally. 183 00:17:36,597 --> 00:17:40,560 Albert gunn: There were six of us, all trainee gunners. 184 00:17:41,602 --> 00:17:43,813 We were in having lunch 185 00:17:44,438 --> 00:17:50,236 when we were told, "right, gentlemen, you're all going back 186 00:17:51,237 --> 00:17:53,322 to such and such a hangar 187 00:17:54,240 --> 00:17:58,619 and they'll be a lot of other air crew there." 188 00:17:58,703 --> 00:18:02,415 And then this was almost out of monty python. 189 00:18:03,541 --> 00:18:06,544 They said "well, gentlemen, we've all completed our training 190 00:18:06,627 --> 00:18:11,549 and now we've um, we've got to get together to form crews." 191 00:18:20,516 --> 00:18:22,351 Hal gardner: And what we were told then 192 00:18:22,435 --> 00:18:24,228 you pick your own crew. 193 00:18:25,229 --> 00:18:27,523 Well, we thought this was madness. 194 00:18:27,607 --> 00:18:32,320 You had no idea of people's abilities or their background whatsoever. 195 00:18:33,404 --> 00:18:36,907 And we wandered around looking at people and looking at their brevets. 196 00:18:40,328 --> 00:18:42,913 Tony Adams: From the brevet on your uniform 197 00:18:43,164 --> 00:18:45,916 it indicated what you were in the crew. 198 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:47,501 "N" for navigator 199 00:18:47,585 --> 00:18:51,255 "s" for signals or wireless operator, etcetera. 200 00:18:52,131 --> 00:18:54,050 John bell: So the first thing you think about is 201 00:18:54,133 --> 00:18:57,094 "how do I find a pilot who is going to get me through the war?" 202 00:18:58,095 --> 00:19:02,183 You had to think a bit about this because you realise "I'm stuck with these guys". 203 00:19:03,351 --> 00:19:06,729 You would think, "gosh, I don't fancy him as a pilot!" 204 00:19:08,314 --> 00:19:09,958 Bill purdy: You're going to live or die with them 205 00:19:09,982 --> 00:19:12,109 so you made sure you were going to live. 206 00:19:13,152 --> 00:19:15,821 You'd go around saying, "I'm short of a navigator 207 00:19:15,905 --> 00:19:17,490 would you like to fly with me?" 208 00:19:17,573 --> 00:19:20,576 "We haven't got a rear gunner, let's see if we can find a rear gunner." 209 00:19:20,785 --> 00:19:24,872 And if you liked who you were talking to, you'd offer to go in the crew with them. 210 00:19:26,040 --> 00:19:29,460 Benny: If I'd handpicked the best, I couldn't have done better 211 00:19:29,543 --> 00:19:31,671 because we just gelled. 212 00:19:32,046 --> 00:19:35,508 It was like a dating agency in a way. 213 00:19:35,591 --> 00:19:38,052 A little bit of wizardry, I think. 214 00:19:39,595 --> 00:19:41,031 Jack Watson: I didn't know it at the time 215 00:19:41,055 --> 00:19:43,516 but I was joining the best crew in the air force. 216 00:19:43,891 --> 00:19:46,769 Every crew thought they were the best crew. 217 00:19:47,144 --> 00:19:49,146 Everybody got on very well with each other. 218 00:19:49,230 --> 00:19:53,067 That was the great part of it because after all 219 00:19:53,150 --> 00:19:55,152 the whole thing was about teamwork. 220 00:20:07,081 --> 00:20:11,585 Narrator: In June 7947, Germany invaded the Soviet union. 221 00:20:15,548 --> 00:20:17,425 With the bed army overwhelmed 222 00:20:17,508 --> 00:20:21,637 it was vital that britain support its new ally in the fight against Hitler. 223 00:20:22,930 --> 00:20:25,725 Churchill: We have offered to the government of Soviet Russia 224 00:20:25,891 --> 00:20:30,354 any technical or economic assistance which is in our power. 225 00:20:34,650 --> 00:20:37,153 Narrator: Churchill knew there was only one way 226 00:20:37,236 --> 00:20:39,405 he could rel/e vs the pressure on the buss/ans. 227 00:20:45,161 --> 00:20:48,998 Churchill: We shall bomb Germany by day as well as by night 228 00:20:49,081 --> 00:20:51,167 in ever—increasing measure 229 00:20:53,502 --> 00:20:57,965 casting upon them month by month a heavier discharge of bombs. 230 00:20:59,633 --> 00:21:01,093 Narrator: A few weeks later 231 00:21:01,260 --> 00:21:05,514 the prime minister met the aircraft that could help him win the war. 232 00:21:08,601 --> 00:21:11,729 It was a prototype of a vro's Lancaster. 233 00:21:21,739 --> 00:21:26,118 Finally he had the means to take the fight to the enemy. 234 00:21:35,920 --> 00:21:38,547 Engine roars 235 00:21:52,061 --> 00:21:54,146 Churchill: But this is only a beginning. 236 00:21:54,730 --> 00:21:59,443 From now henceforward, the main expansion of our air force 237 00:21:59,860 --> 00:22:04,406 especially in heavy bombers, proceeds with gathering speed. 238 00:22:22,842 --> 00:22:25,010 Narrator: In februa/y 7942 239 00:22:25,469 --> 00:22:28,430 a new man was appointed to lead bomber command 240 00:22:28,848 --> 00:22:29,974 Arthur Harris. 241 00:22:31,308 --> 00:22:36,605 His intention was to show the world what strategic bombing could achieve. 242 00:22:38,107 --> 00:22:40,109 Arthur Harris: The Nazis entered this war 243 00:22:40,776 --> 00:22:45,030 under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everybody else 244 00:22:45,614 --> 00:22:47,533 and nobody was going to bomb them. 245 00:22:49,326 --> 00:22:55,332 At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw and half a hundred other places 246 00:22:55,791 --> 00:22:59,712 they put that rather naive theory into operation. 247 00:23:01,130 --> 00:23:05,759 They sowed the wind and now they are going to reap the whirlwind. 248 00:23:08,429 --> 00:23:10,973 Narrator: That whirlwind was to be unleashed 249 00:23:11,265 --> 00:23:15,269 by the new aircraft being delivered to baf bomber stations. 250 00:23:20,316 --> 00:23:22,943 Arthur duggan: I was posted down to raf wyton 251 00:23:23,193 --> 00:23:24,778 which became my base. 252 00:23:25,905 --> 00:23:28,574 And I remember I went to bed 253 00:23:28,991 --> 00:23:32,620 next morning there were 22 brand new lancasters 254 00:23:32,703 --> 00:23:34,496 all round the perimeter road. 255 00:23:34,580 --> 00:23:36,457 And they'd all been flown in overnight 256 00:23:36,540 --> 00:23:40,336 by women and other people from the ferry service. 257 00:23:41,712 --> 00:23:43,130 Blokes couldn't believe it. 258 00:23:54,975 --> 00:24:00,105 Peter: When we went to lancs, the impression was how cramped it was. 259 00:24:01,690 --> 00:24:05,110 It was obviously a machine made for war. 260 00:24:06,403 --> 00:24:09,114 Chick Chandler: Noisy, uncomfortable, cramped 261 00:24:09,198 --> 00:24:12,284 difficult to move in, but did the job. 262 00:24:13,035 --> 00:24:14,954 It was basically a flying bomb—bay, wasn't it? 263 00:24:16,872 --> 00:24:18,540 Laurie: When you got in the aircraft 264 00:24:18,791 --> 00:24:23,462 the pilot would go through with his parachute to sit on 265 00:24:23,629 --> 00:24:27,383 and then the bomb aimer would go right through so he was down on the floor. 266 00:24:29,134 --> 00:24:32,388 I had the best view in the aircraft in the bombing hatch 267 00:24:32,805 --> 00:24:34,640 lying prone, looking down. 268 00:24:36,058 --> 00:24:37,601 Laurie: And then the rear gunner 269 00:24:37,851 --> 00:24:42,731 I would get in and lock him in and put his parachute outside 270 00:24:42,815 --> 00:24:44,817 because there wasn't room for that. 271 00:24:45,651 --> 00:24:47,695 Tom Rogers: I was very comfortable in my turret. 272 00:24:47,861 --> 00:24:52,032 I always said I was the first to start flying and the last to land. 273 00:24:55,202 --> 00:24:57,082 I'm coming from the back of the Lancaster there. 274 00:24:57,121 --> 00:24:59,957 The rear gunner is back there, I'm coming further along 275 00:25:00,040 --> 00:25:02,751 and the first thing you get to is the mid upper turret. 276 00:25:04,962 --> 00:25:08,507 Ken Johnson: It was very limited room in a mid upper turret 277 00:25:09,091 --> 00:25:12,511 so a small bloke like me were, it were ideal. 278 00:25:13,679 --> 00:25:16,682 Hal: And then I had to get over the main spar 279 00:25:16,890 --> 00:25:20,602 and the wireless operator's sitting there on the port side. 280 00:25:22,104 --> 00:25:23,856 Laurie: And there is two sets there. 281 00:25:24,148 --> 00:25:26,984 The receiver and transmitter. 282 00:25:28,444 --> 00:25:30,946 Hal: But the side of him had a little passage 283 00:25:31,071 --> 00:25:32,591 and that would be the navigator's seat 284 00:25:32,656 --> 00:25:35,951 so I'd be sitting facing the port side of the aircraft. 285 00:25:37,745 --> 00:25:43,250 And then flight engineer for the engines and the pilot next, they were up a bit. 286 00:25:44,209 --> 00:25:45,961 Peter: The seat was comfortable. 287 00:25:46,712 --> 00:25:48,088 You got a good view. 288 00:25:48,922 --> 00:25:51,467 All the throttles were nicely put together. 289 00:25:51,550 --> 00:25:54,261 It was... it was um... Sounds a bit presumptuous 290 00:25:54,344 --> 00:25:56,055 it was a pilot's aeroplane. 291 00:25:56,722 --> 00:26:00,434 It was responsive but very powerful. 292 00:26:05,272 --> 00:26:06,565 I loved the thing. 293 00:26:21,455 --> 00:26:22,932 Archive reporter: Lancasters are being built 294 00:26:22,956 --> 00:26:26,794 in several factories in britain and Canada, built in terrific numbers. 295 00:26:27,127 --> 00:26:29,838 With every man and woman engaged in their construction 296 00:26:29,922 --> 00:26:31,381 one thought is upper most 297 00:26:31,548 --> 00:26:35,677 the raf is depending on them for lancasters, more lancasters 298 00:26:35,761 --> 00:26:37,596 and yet more lancasters. 299 00:26:49,608 --> 00:26:54,029 Narrator: Lancasters, consisting of over 55, 000 separate parts 300 00:26:54,446 --> 00:26:59,535 were made in sections in avro's factories in Manchester and the north of england. 301 00:27:02,329 --> 00:27:05,499 Most were then assembled here in woodford. 302 00:27:10,254 --> 00:27:12,297 It was a vast undertaking. 303 00:27:13,298 --> 00:27:18,011 Six major organisations employed over 7.7 million people 304 00:27:18,095 --> 00:27:20,889 in 920 separate companies. 305 00:27:22,266 --> 00:27:25,477 Over 7300 of the bombers were built. 306 00:27:31,275 --> 00:27:32,860 As part of their training 307 00:27:33,026 --> 00:27:37,156 some aircrew were sent to woodford to learn more about the aircraft. 308 00:27:37,990 --> 00:27:41,076 Jack Watson: Coaches came and took us all to Manchester. 309 00:27:41,451 --> 00:27:43,537 And as we got off the coach 310 00:27:43,620 --> 00:27:45,998 there were loads and loads of girls. 311 00:27:47,708 --> 00:27:50,169 They were coming up to us and, "hello, I'm so and so" 312 00:27:50,252 --> 00:27:53,255 and this young lady came up, she was about the same age as me 313 00:27:53,338 --> 00:27:54,965 and she said, "oh, my name's Yvonne". 314 00:27:55,799 --> 00:27:58,594 And I managed to meet her every evening. 315 00:27:59,678 --> 00:28:03,015 Yeah, that was quite a, um... Enlightening experience. 316 00:28:04,057 --> 00:28:08,687 She taught me more about the facts of life than they did about the Lancaster. 317 00:28:10,898 --> 00:28:13,192 Well, I've often said, "thank you". He laughs 318 00:28:17,738 --> 00:28:22,075 but it was fantastic to see the aircraft being built at woodford. 319 00:28:22,951 --> 00:28:27,331 They had hundreds of aircraft there all in the stage of being assembled. 320 00:28:28,498 --> 00:28:30,709 I can still picture it in my mind now. 321 00:28:44,389 --> 00:28:48,060 Narrator: Now, with sufficient aircraft and aircre ws 322 00:28:48,518 --> 00:28:51,230 bomber command could raise its game. 323 00:28:58,737 --> 00:29:00,614 In may 7942 324 00:29:00,864 --> 00:29:06,036 one of Harris ' first moves was a spectacular operation against Cologne. 325 00:29:07,621 --> 00:29:11,333 I think Harris wanted to draw attention 326 00:29:11,416 --> 00:29:15,087 to the fact that we could put a thousand aircraft in the air 327 00:29:15,170 --> 00:29:16,630 to bomb Germany. 328 00:29:19,591 --> 00:29:23,303 Narrator: Amongst those bombers were stir/ings, hal/faxes 329 00:29:24,513 --> 00:29:29,685 and 73 lancasters, their first large—scale use on operations. 330 00:29:36,441 --> 00:29:39,695 The thousand bomber bald was a major success. 331 00:29:40,570 --> 00:29:42,281 Churchill wrote to Harris 332 00:29:42,823 --> 00:29:46,410 ”this proof of the growing power of the British bomber force 333 00:29:46,493 --> 00:29:52,207 is also a herald of what Germany will receive city by city from now on. ” 334 00:29:53,292 --> 00:29:56,503 And at the heart of it would be the Lancaster. 335 00:29:56,920 --> 00:29:59,840 Typewriter clacks 336 00:30:00,674 --> 00:30:04,219 the new strategy was called area bombing. 337 00:30:05,095 --> 00:30:09,516 Cities themselves rather than the factories in them became the targets. 338 00:30:12,394 --> 00:30:16,231 N/ght after n/ght, orders were issued for their destruction. 339 00:30:17,149 --> 00:30:19,860 Archive reporter: Telephonists, messengers, teleprint operators 340 00:30:19,943 --> 00:30:22,779 the orders pass along a chain, staffed by air women. 341 00:30:23,739 --> 00:30:25,449 Wendy Carter: I was in signals section. 342 00:30:25,532 --> 00:30:27,844 Archive reporter: From command headquarters to group headquarters 343 00:30:27,868 --> 00:30:29,953 from group to station, from station to squadron. 344 00:30:30,037 --> 00:30:32,372 Wendy: Obviously we knew when ops were on 345 00:30:32,873 --> 00:30:34,666 it was just part of our life. 346 00:30:35,709 --> 00:30:39,671 We were connected to headquarters, to bomber command 347 00:30:39,755 --> 00:30:42,799 and um, you'd get messages of course 348 00:30:42,883 --> 00:30:46,511 which we then had to give to the ops room or whatever. 349 00:30:53,685 --> 00:30:57,022 So we got ready for our first operation. 350 00:31:00,567 --> 00:31:05,113 Nobody can actually tell you what it's like to go on ops. 351 00:31:05,197 --> 00:31:07,532 You've got to experience it. 352 00:31:07,616 --> 00:31:10,452 You have to do the on—the—job training, as it were. 353 00:31:11,912 --> 00:31:14,373 Alan: I certainly had butterflies in my stomach. 354 00:31:14,498 --> 00:31:17,334 I began to feel, "well, this is the real thing now" 355 00:31:17,667 --> 00:31:20,796 we were going to fly on an operational sortie. 356 00:31:22,547 --> 00:31:24,817 Nathan Isaacs: The announcement came over the loudspeaker. 357 00:31:24,841 --> 00:31:29,471 "Crews number so and so, so, so, so, so, report to the briefing room." 358 00:31:34,226 --> 00:31:36,561 You were always wondering 359 00:31:36,645 --> 00:31:39,606 what the target was going to be for... For the night. 360 00:31:41,942 --> 00:31:46,947 Jack Watson: We walked in and there is a curtain drawn across the backboard. 361 00:31:48,615 --> 00:31:51,868 Albert: And then in walked the co 362 00:31:52,869 --> 00:31:57,874 and he would be followed by a whole string of officers 363 00:31:58,417 --> 00:32:04,381 who were all, in theory anyway, experts in their field. 364 00:32:09,052 --> 00:32:13,306 Tony: Then the commanding officer would pull back a curtain 365 00:32:13,390 --> 00:32:17,477 that was covering the huge map on the wall of Northern Europe 366 00:32:17,561 --> 00:32:20,689 and he would announce to us 367 00:32:21,231 --> 00:32:25,485 "your target tonight, gentlemen, is..." 368 00:32:30,157 --> 00:32:33,994 It was dramatic, the revelation when they drew back the curtain 369 00:32:34,077 --> 00:32:36,788 and told you where you were going. He laughs 370 00:32:36,872 --> 00:32:39,040 and if it was Berlin or some of the big ones 371 00:32:39,124 --> 00:32:41,793 there would be a groan going round the briefing room. 372 00:32:42,377 --> 00:32:44,171 Peter: There would be various exclamations 373 00:32:44,254 --> 00:32:45,797 of blasphemy and whatnot. 374 00:32:46,214 --> 00:32:48,258 John: "Oh lord, not going back there again!" 375 00:32:48,341 --> 00:32:50,051 "Not that place again!" He laughs 376 00:32:52,888 --> 00:32:56,266 there was always an air of suspicion over the met forecasts. 377 00:32:56,349 --> 00:33:00,020 They were always laughed at and shouted down, you know? 378 00:33:00,103 --> 00:33:03,273 "Oh, the met man", cos they could never get it right. 379 00:33:03,356 --> 00:33:04,441 He laughs 380 00:33:04,816 --> 00:33:09,070 the weather's good, we hope, so you should have no difficulty 381 00:33:09,154 --> 00:33:12,365 in finding the target, so prang it and prang it hard. 382 00:33:13,033 --> 00:33:15,118 Alright, chaps? And good luck. 383 00:33:16,745 --> 00:33:22,083 Jack Watson: On that first op you were more in wonder what was gonna happen. 384 00:33:23,001 --> 00:33:26,546 But I did realise that, from what people had told me 385 00:33:26,755 --> 00:33:28,298 you didn't stand an earthly. 386 00:33:34,054 --> 00:33:36,264 Indistinct chati'er 387 00:33:43,355 --> 00:33:46,107 William judge: I was young, 18 years old, and I was scared. 388 00:33:47,317 --> 00:33:49,194 Scared, scared, scared. 389 00:33:50,111 --> 00:33:55,700 Cos we was all fresh, but we were all very confident in our pilot. 390 00:33:59,454 --> 00:34:04,000 Laurie: I suppose at that age as well I was 18, still 18 391 00:34:04,084 --> 00:34:09,089 it was the excitement, I suppose, of fulfilling all your training. 392 00:34:13,218 --> 00:34:16,012 Chick: I was apprehensive from the word go. 393 00:34:16,846 --> 00:34:19,182 I started off more apprehensive than the rest of the group 394 00:34:19,266 --> 00:34:21,434 cos I think they thought it was gonna be a doddle 395 00:34:21,768 --> 00:34:24,020 but I thought, "this isn't gonna be easy". 396 00:34:27,649 --> 00:34:29,568 Ron mayhill: We were definitely nervous 397 00:34:29,693 --> 00:34:32,404 and I remember the wing commander coming round in his car 398 00:34:32,612 --> 00:34:33,989 knowing it was our first 399 00:34:34,656 --> 00:34:37,701 and said, "best of luck, boys". 400 00:34:38,243 --> 00:34:40,287 And I remember the ground crew, wonderful 401 00:34:40,662 --> 00:34:44,291 they said to us, "your uncle will never let you down". 402 00:34:47,502 --> 00:34:50,255 Neil: When an aircraft takes off it goes. 403 00:34:51,214 --> 00:34:52,674 There's no room for turning 404 00:34:52,757 --> 00:34:54,759 stopping and looking back. 405 00:34:55,010 --> 00:34:57,804 It goes, so everything gotta be right. 406 00:35:00,640 --> 00:35:02,392 Engine sputi'ers 407 00:35:08,189 --> 00:35:10,650 Engines rumble 408 00:35:15,530 --> 00:35:17,574 bill: When those four Merlins cough 409 00:35:17,657 --> 00:35:21,411 and you start to hear the exhaust it's er... 410 00:35:21,494 --> 00:35:25,790 It's like something that's almost born again. 411 00:35:33,757 --> 00:35:37,969 Ken: When it started, you felt all the noise and the... 412 00:35:38,762 --> 00:35:40,221 In your chest. 413 00:35:41,222 --> 00:35:45,393 The er... the feeling of the power and the... 414 00:35:46,227 --> 00:35:47,604 Everything about it. 415 00:35:54,694 --> 00:35:56,780 Rusty: And then the ground crew said, "cheerio" 416 00:35:56,863 --> 00:36:02,494 and you taxied out and you got into this long chain of aircraft 417 00:36:02,577 --> 00:36:03,995 taxiing round to take off. 418 00:36:08,667 --> 00:36:11,127 Ernie Holmes: I had no fears, I was... 419 00:36:12,587 --> 00:36:14,214 "Get on with the job." 420 00:36:18,218 --> 00:36:19,469 We were at war. 421 00:36:21,930 --> 00:36:25,183 But as far as being a Christian is concerned... 422 00:36:29,938 --> 00:36:33,775 How could you ask your god to give you a blessing 423 00:36:34,442 --> 00:36:39,030 when he knows that you're carrying a load of weapons 424 00:36:39,114 --> 00:36:40,407 that's gonna to kill people? 425 00:36:47,247 --> 00:36:50,917 But I'm afraid, what was going on in the world... 426 00:36:51,418 --> 00:36:53,128 Something had to be done. 427 00:37:08,268 --> 00:37:13,106 I had no other feelings but, "get this done". 428 00:38:00,445 --> 00:38:01,780 Archive reporter: Target Germany. 429 00:38:02,447 --> 00:38:05,784 These were some of the main centres of German heavy industry. 430 00:38:06,201 --> 00:38:10,747 Nuremberg, where they made u boat engines, guns, tanks, bombers. 431 00:38:11,247 --> 00:38:14,334 Berlin, aero engines, the electrical industry 432 00:38:14,584 --> 00:38:16,002 a great railway centre. 433 00:38:16,920 --> 00:38:20,256 The ruhr, the heart of German heavy industry 434 00:38:20,590 --> 00:38:23,218 coal and iron, steel and power. 435 00:38:26,387 --> 00:38:27,764 Bob: In 1943 436 00:38:27,847 --> 00:38:31,059 every operation we did on the ruhr was an epic. 437 00:38:31,142 --> 00:38:32,769 There's no other word for it. 438 00:38:39,150 --> 00:38:41,444 George: Take the krupp works at essen. 439 00:38:42,195 --> 00:38:44,948 Enormous importance to the Germans. 440 00:38:45,865 --> 00:38:49,536 It was an obvious target that was always gonna be attacked. 441 00:38:58,545 --> 00:39:00,213 Nathan: I would say that er... 442 00:39:01,047 --> 00:39:04,968 Sixty percent or 70 percent of our trips were to the ruhr valley. 443 00:39:07,262 --> 00:39:09,764 Duisburg. Gelsenkirchen. 444 00:39:10,223 --> 00:39:11,683 George: Dortmund. Wuppertal. 445 00:39:11,850 --> 00:39:13,309 Chick: Dusseldorf. — Alan: Essen. 446 00:39:13,393 --> 00:39:15,228 Johnny: Hamm. — Bob: Monchengladbach. 447 00:39:15,562 --> 00:39:17,772 Krefeld. Munster. 448 00:39:18,857 --> 00:39:21,734 The whole lot of them, all the way through, one after the other. 449 00:39:22,277 --> 00:39:23,903 Alarm! — alarm rings 450 00:39:27,240 --> 00:39:30,410 the ruhr was also known as happy valley. 451 00:39:31,411 --> 00:39:33,288 It was anything but happy. 452 00:39:35,707 --> 00:39:41,546 It was probably the most heavily defended area in Germany. 453 00:39:41,796 --> 00:39:44,883 The defences were just unbelievable. 454 00:39:45,258 --> 00:39:46,843 Guns boom 455 00:40:02,442 --> 00:40:05,028 George: When we were approaching the target... 456 00:40:05,570 --> 00:40:08,865 You could see the fires and you could see the flak. 457 00:40:09,198 --> 00:40:11,159 Explosions boom 458 00:40:11,951 --> 00:40:15,079 John: The sky is filled with bursting shells. 459 00:40:15,163 --> 00:40:16,539 I really mean filled. 460 00:40:23,463 --> 00:40:25,798 Rusty: Fireworks. Er... 461 00:40:26,466 --> 00:40:29,844 Now I'm not so keen on fireworks 462 00:40:30,470 --> 00:40:33,806 because it's such a reminder of what it was like then. 463 00:40:35,016 --> 00:40:39,062 George: When you look at the new year's Eve fireworks 464 00:40:39,145 --> 00:40:40,772 over Sydney harbour 465 00:40:42,398 --> 00:40:47,612 that is what you're looking at roughly at the target in Germany. 466 00:40:49,405 --> 00:40:50,907 And you think to yourself 467 00:40:51,824 --> 00:40:54,118 "how the hell are we gonna get through that lot?" 468 00:40:59,874 --> 00:41:03,461 Tom: If the anti—aircraft fire is getting close to you 469 00:41:04,712 --> 00:41:07,423 you'll know how close it is cos you'll smell it. 470 00:41:07,548 --> 00:41:08,841 You could smell the cordite. 471 00:41:09,217 --> 00:41:11,678 That's how close they were putting us down. 472 00:41:11,844 --> 00:41:13,805 I know the first time I smelt cordite 473 00:41:13,888 --> 00:41:16,224 I thought, "Christ, the next one's gonna hit us." 474 00:41:18,017 --> 00:41:22,522 John: It really only needed a tiny piece of a shell fragment to hit an engine 475 00:41:22,605 --> 00:41:24,732 which would catch on fire and that would be it. 476 00:41:25,942 --> 00:41:31,406 So it was alarming but I just ignored it and got on with my job. 477 00:41:34,534 --> 00:41:36,786 Narrator: To help increase bombing accuracy 478 00:41:37,078 --> 00:41:42,333 experienced crews were formed into special squadrons called pathfinders. 479 00:41:44,377 --> 00:41:46,170 Using the latest na v/gation aids 480 00:41:46,629 --> 00:41:51,801 they dropped coloured fiares known as target indicators on the aiming point. 481 00:41:53,302 --> 00:41:56,472 Ernie: It meant the bombers coming in 482 00:41:56,556 --> 00:42:01,602 now had visual reference on the ground that that was the target. 483 00:42:05,606 --> 00:42:08,234 Peter: When we get to the target 484 00:42:08,317 --> 00:42:11,446 at a certain distance out the bomb aimer takes over. 485 00:42:13,322 --> 00:42:18,327 My job was to align the bomb sight with the target 486 00:42:18,703 --> 00:42:19,871 and drop the bombs. 487 00:42:22,040 --> 00:42:24,083 Bombs explode 488 00:42:24,167 --> 00:42:26,961 Peter: I said to Dickie, "I'll point you in the right direction 489 00:42:27,045 --> 00:42:29,255 and you get it right first time 490 00:42:29,338 --> 00:42:35,011 cos we drop the bombs on the first run, we are not going round again." 491 00:42:36,137 --> 00:42:37,221 Man: Bomb doors open. 492 00:42:39,265 --> 00:42:42,852 Rusty: And this is where he is giving you this, "left, left, right, right 493 00:42:43,019 --> 00:42:44,270 steady, steady, steady." 494 00:42:45,772 --> 00:42:49,025 And when he was over the target he'd say, "right, bomb's gone". 495 00:42:49,484 --> 00:42:51,986 Bomb whistles — bomb aimer: Bomb '5 gone. 496 00:42:52,236 --> 00:42:54,155 But you didn't escape straight away 497 00:42:54,238 --> 00:42:57,742 because we had to take a photograph of where your bomb's burst. 498 00:42:59,660 --> 00:43:02,038 Peter: And then you put the nose down 499 00:43:02,121 --> 00:43:04,624 pointing to where you were going as fast as you could 500 00:43:04,707 --> 00:43:05,787 and got the hell out of it. 501 00:43:18,221 --> 00:43:21,891 Narrator: Harris ' campaign against the industrial cities of the ruhr 502 00:43:21,974 --> 00:43:23,810 was devastatingly effective. 503 00:43:25,269 --> 00:43:29,357 But less conventional methods of bombing were also being considered 504 00:43:32,944 --> 00:43:36,614 one was an idea from inventor Barnes Wallis. 505 00:43:38,157 --> 00:43:40,910 It harnessed the full capability of the Lancaster 506 00:43:41,410 --> 00:43:43,913 and would put it on the world stage. 507 00:43:50,962 --> 00:43:53,381 Wallis was developing a secret bomb 508 00:43:53,464 --> 00:43:56,717 to destroy the dams that powered the ruhr factories. 509 00:44:00,429 --> 00:44:03,724 A special unit was formed to car/y out the operation 510 00:44:04,183 --> 00:44:05,685 squadron x. 511 00:44:07,270 --> 00:44:11,440 Squadron x was 617 squadron, eventually. 512 00:44:13,484 --> 00:44:16,821 Its leader was wing commander guy Gibson. 513 00:44:18,781 --> 00:44:23,327 He was arrogant and a strict disciplinarian 514 00:44:24,579 --> 00:44:29,375 but the true essence of his leadership comes in the attack itself. 515 00:44:30,001 --> 00:44:32,461 He was no doubt a brilliant attack leader. 516 00:44:32,879 --> 00:44:35,506 Man on film: That's your main target, the mohne dam. 517 00:44:35,673 --> 00:44:40,386 Narrator: The stay of the attack was immortalised in the 7955 film. 518 00:44:40,469 --> 00:44:42,197 Man on film: If you can blow a hole in this wall 519 00:44:42,221 --> 00:44:44,765 you'll bring the ruhr steel industry to a standstill 520 00:44:45,141 --> 00:44:46,642 and do much other damage besides. 521 00:44:47,310 --> 00:44:48,370 I'm showing you the targets 522 00:44:48,394 --> 00:44:50,122 but you'll be the only man in the squadron who knows 523 00:44:50,146 --> 00:44:52,064 so keep it that way. — very good, sir. 524 00:44:52,148 --> 00:44:53,667 And these are the models of the two other dams 525 00:44:53,691 --> 00:44:57,528 the eder and the sorpe, but the mohne is the most important. 526 00:44:57,612 --> 00:44:59,280 I see, sir. — come along and study these 527 00:44:59,363 --> 00:45:00,364 as often as you like. 528 00:45:03,367 --> 00:45:05,077 Narrator: Having proved the concept 529 00:45:05,411 --> 00:45:08,539 Wallis had to work out how to get the weapon on target. 530 00:45:10,708 --> 00:45:14,045 The Lancaster was adapted to car/y the four—ton bomb. 531 00:45:15,254 --> 00:45:17,590 To fly at precisely 60 feet 532 00:45:17,840 --> 00:45:21,010 spotlights measured the aircraft's height above the water. 533 00:45:21,761 --> 00:45:25,014 A motor was used to spin the weapon before it was dropped 534 00:45:25,348 --> 00:45:28,184 which would then skip across the sun'ace of the lake. 535 00:45:31,103 --> 00:45:35,316 No other bomber at that time was capable of canying out the operation. 536 00:46:11,686 --> 00:46:14,605 Engine roars 537 00:46:20,653 --> 00:46:21,862 Well, the training's over. 538 00:46:23,781 --> 00:46:26,951 For obvious reasons you've had to work without knowing your target 539 00:46:27,535 --> 00:46:28,536 or even your weapon. 540 00:46:28,911 --> 00:46:30,579 The aoc was there 541 00:46:30,913 --> 00:46:34,625 station commander, Gibson, of course, doing the briefing 542 00:46:35,042 --> 00:46:36,294 Barnes Wallis was there. 543 00:46:38,838 --> 00:46:42,591 You're going to attack the great dams of western Germany. 544 00:46:45,011 --> 00:46:47,471 Johnny: Gibson explained that he would take off 545 00:46:47,555 --> 00:46:51,225 with two others in three formation and they would head for the mohne 546 00:46:51,309 --> 00:46:56,063 and once it had been breached, they'd go over to the eder and attack that. 547 00:46:58,065 --> 00:47:00,192 Five crews were briefed for the sorpe 548 00:47:00,276 --> 00:47:01,986 and that had to be different. 549 00:47:02,445 --> 00:47:05,489 They had no towers, so there's no sighting means of it 550 00:47:06,032 --> 00:47:10,036 and it was so placed in the hills that it couldn't be attacked head on. 551 00:47:12,246 --> 00:47:15,875 Instead we were briefed that we had to fly along the dam 552 00:47:16,125 --> 00:47:19,920 and to drop the bomb as near as possible as you could estimate 553 00:47:20,004 --> 00:47:21,339 to the centre of the dam. 554 00:47:22,923 --> 00:47:25,885 It meant we weren't going to use any of the bombing techniques 555 00:47:25,968 --> 00:47:26,968 we'd used in training. 556 00:47:31,557 --> 00:47:32,892 Narrator: As the film showed 557 00:47:32,975 --> 00:47:38,939 the operation was bold, daring, and extremely dangerous. 558 00:48:10,930 --> 00:48:12,932 Johnny: As we crossed the coast 559 00:48:13,766 --> 00:48:19,271 we had to fly down at low level to avoid enemy fighters. 560 00:48:21,565 --> 00:48:25,528 Our pilot Joe McCarthy saw a couple of sand dunes on the coast 561 00:48:25,611 --> 00:48:27,071 and went down between them. 562 00:48:29,573 --> 00:48:32,827 At zero feet, our biggest problem was the guns down there. 563 00:48:39,750 --> 00:48:42,086 We got to, eventually, the sorpe. 564 00:48:44,130 --> 00:48:47,675 The first thing that we saw was on the side of the hill 565 00:48:47,758 --> 00:48:49,677 down which we were supposed to attack 566 00:48:49,760 --> 00:48:53,931 there was a church steeple, which I don't remember seeing on the model. 567 00:48:59,186 --> 00:49:02,982 And so Joe decided to use that as a marker. 568 00:49:07,820 --> 00:49:09,196 Not an easy thing. 569 00:49:09,280 --> 00:49:11,907 We'd had no practice at that sort of attack at all. 570 00:49:12,450 --> 00:49:15,286 If I wasn't satisfied, I called, "dummy run." 571 00:49:15,744 --> 00:49:20,833 If he wasn't satisfied, he just pulled away before we hit the hills on the opposite side. 572 00:49:29,341 --> 00:49:32,011 And after about the sixth or seventh of these 573 00:49:33,137 --> 00:49:37,558 a voice from the rear turret, "won't somebody get that bomb out of here?" 574 00:49:38,225 --> 00:49:42,521 And I had to realise I had become the most unpopular member of crew 575 00:49:42,605 --> 00:49:43,689 in double quick time. 576 00:49:52,656 --> 00:49:55,910 I'm sure Joe thought that the lower we got 577 00:49:56,577 --> 00:50:00,164 the easier it would be to estimate the dropping point. 578 00:50:02,708 --> 00:50:06,670 So on the tenth run, we were down to 30 feet 579 00:50:06,879 --> 00:50:08,380 and when I said, "bomb gone" 580 00:50:08,464 --> 00:50:11,300 "thank Christ" came from the rear turret just like that. 581 00:50:17,056 --> 00:50:22,228 And he estimated that that tower of water went up to something like a thousand feet. 582 00:50:23,687 --> 00:50:28,442 We had crumbled the top of the dam for a distance of about ten yards. 583 00:50:30,778 --> 00:50:32,446 So then we set course for home 584 00:50:32,988 --> 00:50:35,741 and that for me was the highlight of the trip. 585 00:50:37,910 --> 00:50:40,037 It took us over the mohne. 586 00:50:40,371 --> 00:50:43,082 We knew by radio that it had been breached. 587 00:50:44,291 --> 00:50:46,335 There was water everywhere. 588 00:50:46,710 --> 00:50:51,674 It was just like an inland sea and it was still coming out of that dam 589 00:50:52,132 --> 00:50:55,844 even what, 20 minutes, maybe half an hour after it had been breached. 590 00:50:58,847 --> 00:51:01,475 But my god, what a loss. 591 00:51:03,060 --> 00:51:04,353 Eight aircraft. 592 00:51:05,145 --> 00:51:09,024 Fifty—three aircrew killed and three taken prisoner. 593 00:51:09,817 --> 00:51:15,489 What a devastating result for one squadron on one night's operation. 594 00:51:33,132 --> 00:51:38,971 I went back to the mess where the waitresses, some of them were crying 595 00:51:40,055 --> 00:51:44,685 because of the number of empty seats there were in the mess, the dining room. 596 00:51:45,811 --> 00:51:49,898 And the chief said, "I think you better go back to bed, girls. 597 00:51:50,441 --> 00:51:53,027 Come back in the morning, you might feel a bit better." 598 00:52:00,784 --> 00:52:01,869 Was it worth it? 599 00:52:03,245 --> 00:52:04,288 I wonder. 600 00:52:04,955 --> 00:52:09,001 But that was, of course, was the loss side. 601 00:52:09,752 --> 00:52:12,796 There was a gain side which was more important. 602 00:52:22,514 --> 00:52:25,517 George: We all thought what a magnificent effort 603 00:52:25,601 --> 00:52:27,102 had been made, you know? 604 00:52:27,394 --> 00:52:31,565 Er, these chaps going in over water 605 00:52:31,982 --> 00:52:36,528 flying at 240 miles an hour at 60 feet. 606 00:52:37,488 --> 00:52:39,782 Just spellbound by it 607 00:52:40,783 --> 00:52:44,995 wondering whether we could ever have done the same thing. 608 00:52:51,210 --> 00:52:54,963 Johnny: Whatever it achieved was to our advantage. 609 00:52:55,923 --> 00:52:59,468 It proved to Hitler and the German hierarchy 610 00:53:00,094 --> 00:53:02,262 that what they thought was impregnable 611 00:53:02,763 --> 00:53:05,516 the royal air force could get through and destroy. 612 00:53:13,148 --> 00:53:16,944 George: When people saw this and read about it 613 00:53:17,486 --> 00:53:22,241 I thought, "well, what a marvellous thing that the raf has done 614 00:53:22,825 --> 00:53:26,620 and is this a sign of what they can do in the future?" 615 00:53:29,248 --> 00:53:31,834 Johnny: Perhaps its greatest effect 616 00:53:32,334 --> 00:53:35,671 was on the morale of the people in this country. 617 00:53:36,630 --> 00:53:40,008 It raised the thought, "we're winning something. 618 00:53:40,467 --> 00:53:42,636 Is this a turning point in the war?" 619 00:53:43,137 --> 00:53:45,180 It may have been, I'm still not sure. 620 00:53:45,806 --> 00:53:47,891 But at least it didn't get worse than that. 621 00:54:02,906 --> 00:54:06,160 Narrator: The dams raid caused great destruction 622 00:54:06,702 --> 00:54:09,830 but enemy engineers were quick to repair the damage. 623 00:54:10,456 --> 00:54:13,459 Despite these setbacks at home and on other fronts 624 00:54:13,917 --> 00:54:16,336 Germany remained a formidable enemy. 625 00:54:22,050 --> 00:54:26,388 Bob: Morale in bomber command was very low indeed 626 00:54:26,472 --> 00:54:28,474 because the losses were building up 627 00:54:28,640 --> 00:54:31,643 and we didn't seem to have any positive way 628 00:54:31,727 --> 00:54:37,608 of getting over these defences that the Germans were improving all the time. 629 00:54:39,067 --> 00:54:41,278 Narrator: The most effective of these defences 630 00:54:41,361 --> 00:54:44,031 was the luftwaffe's night fighter force. 631 00:54:44,782 --> 00:54:47,117 Engine roars 632 00:54:48,660 --> 00:54:51,163 flying heavily armed, twin—engined aircraft 633 00:54:51,246 --> 00:54:54,875 like the messerschmitt 770 or the junkers 88 634 00:54:55,292 --> 00:55:00,380 radar—equipped night fighters accounted for the bulk of bomber command's losses. 635 00:55:03,342 --> 00:55:07,846 Tom: Now, a night fighter was guided by a ground radar operator. 636 00:55:08,555 --> 00:55:10,808 Man speaks German 637 00:55:11,850 --> 00:55:16,980 and once he picked up your blip, he would then guide the aircraft on to you. 638 00:55:17,564 --> 00:55:20,692 Man speaks German 639 00:55:20,776 --> 00:55:23,362 Tom: That's how most aircraft got shot down 640 00:55:23,445 --> 00:55:24,947 was between that team. 641 00:55:25,280 --> 00:55:26,323 It was very efficient. 642 00:55:29,117 --> 00:55:30,369 Very efficient indeed. 643 00:55:34,873 --> 00:55:38,585 Narrator: But British scientists came up with a deceptively simple device 644 00:55:38,669 --> 00:55:40,587 to counter the enemy's radar. 645 00:55:42,172 --> 00:55:44,424 It was codenamed ”window”. 646 00:55:46,927 --> 00:55:49,596 Jack dark: Window was a strip of metallic paper 647 00:55:49,972 --> 00:55:52,724 which we scattered from the aircraft 648 00:55:53,517 --> 00:55:56,395 and it gave the impression to the German radar 649 00:55:56,770 --> 00:56:00,732 of an enormous amount of planes so they couldn't pick up an individual plane. 650 00:56:02,651 --> 00:56:06,822 The German defences were poleaxed in a way 651 00:56:07,114 --> 00:56:09,241 because they just didn't know what they were doing. 652 00:56:12,411 --> 00:56:16,456 Narrator: In July 7943, using window for the first time 653 00:56:16,540 --> 00:56:20,878 Harris planned four attacks on the heart of German y's shipbuilding industiy. 654 00:56:27,926 --> 00:56:29,595 With the defences blinded 655 00:56:29,887 --> 00:56:32,639 the bombers were targeting not just the shipyards 656 00:56:33,432 --> 00:56:35,434 but the workers' housing too. 657 00:56:36,101 --> 00:56:39,897 Ernie: We went to Hamburg to bomb that place. 658 00:56:41,356 --> 00:56:46,111 After the first night, place was still burning. 659 00:56:54,745 --> 00:56:56,038 Narrator: On the second night 660 00:56:56,121 --> 00:57:01,585 hot and diy weather conditions combined with the blazes started by the bombing 661 00:57:02,002 --> 00:57:05,672 created a firestorm that swept through the city. 662 00:57:12,554 --> 00:57:18,518 Ernie: The second night, I remember asking my navigator 663 00:57:18,602 --> 00:57:19,686 to come and have a look. 664 00:57:21,146 --> 00:57:26,610 He didn't like to see towns burning, and yet that's what our task was. 665 00:57:36,578 --> 00:57:38,330 John: You could see it from a long way off. 666 00:57:39,206 --> 00:57:43,710 The whole city on fire, and it's quite an alarming sight. 667 00:57:44,169 --> 00:57:46,088 And you're adding to it. 668 00:57:47,714 --> 00:57:51,093 And the bomb aimer has the best view of them all as you can imagine 669 00:57:51,176 --> 00:57:53,345 through the front perspex. 670 00:57:53,428 --> 00:57:57,182 Bombs explode 671 00:58:03,772 --> 00:58:04,815 Bob: I can see it now. 672 00:58:04,898 --> 00:58:08,110 The firestorm was started on the submarine pens 673 00:58:08,193 --> 00:58:10,570 went right the way through, right up the river elbe 674 00:58:10,654 --> 00:58:15,075 right to the other side and Hamburg was literally wiped right out. 675 00:58:28,839 --> 00:58:32,175 I was sorry that we had to do so much damage to it. 676 00:58:37,848 --> 00:58:40,517 Archive reporter: Bombers of the eighth United States air force 677 00:58:40,642 --> 00:58:42,561 taking off from aerodromes in england 678 00:58:42,686 --> 00:58:46,690 continue their round the clock devastation of war plants in Nazi Germany. 679 00:58:51,611 --> 00:58:55,574 Narrator: America had come into the conflict in December 7947 680 00:58:56,324 --> 00:58:58,994 and now it too was taking the war to Germany. 681 00:59:00,704 --> 00:59:02,539 The daylight raid on Hamburg 682 00:59:02,706 --> 00:59:06,001 was the first time us bombers joined the raf in the attack. 683 00:59:07,377 --> 00:59:11,256 Archive reporter: In broad daylight, mighty squadrons roar across the north sea. 684 00:59:11,590 --> 00:59:15,010 Over Hamburg, tons of bombs rain from the skies... 685 00:59:15,677 --> 00:59:20,182 Narrator: The allied raids shattered the city and rocked the Nazi leadership. 686 00:59:20,265 --> 00:59:22,585 Archive reporter: Aerial photographs show the results... 687 00:59:23,060 --> 00:59:28,648 Narrator: 40,000 people were killed and 7.2 million fied for the countiyside. 688 00:59:30,067 --> 00:59:32,152 Bob: The Germans were absolutely shattered 689 00:59:33,028 --> 00:59:37,657 but war is war, whichever way you look at it. 690 00:59:38,200 --> 00:59:41,828 The hard facts are we had a job to do and we had to get on with it. 691 00:59:42,871 --> 00:59:46,666 There were no ifs and buts that er, "well, perhaps we shouldn't do this 692 00:59:46,750 --> 00:59:48,126 or we shouldn't do that." 693 00:59:49,127 --> 00:59:50,670 We were given the target 694 00:59:50,754 --> 00:59:54,424 we were told why we were taking that particular target 695 00:59:54,966 --> 00:59:56,635 and we had to get on with it. 696 00:59:56,718 --> 01:00:02,641 It was taking the war to Germany by the only means possible at that time 697 01:00:03,141 --> 01:00:07,104 and nobody, in arguing against it 698 01:00:07,395 --> 01:00:09,439 has come up with another solution 699 01:00:09,523 --> 01:00:11,483 for carrying the war to Germany. 700 01:00:20,075 --> 01:00:22,410 Narrator: But baf reconnaissance had revealed 701 01:00:22,828 --> 01:00:28,542 that Germany had new and terriij/ing ideas about canying the war to britain. 702 01:00:33,505 --> 01:00:37,175 V2 rockets, the world's first ballistic missiles 703 01:00:37,509 --> 01:00:41,138 were being developed at a secret location on the baltic coast 704 01:00:43,765 --> 01:00:47,519 car/ying a one—ton warhead at three times the speed of sound 705 01:00:48,353 --> 01:00:50,564 there would be no defence against them. 706 01:00:56,319 --> 01:00:58,113 Explosion booms 707 01:00:59,781 --> 01:01:04,369 the site had to be destroyed before they could enter sen/ice. 708 01:01:08,999 --> 01:01:12,794 George: Well, the first thing we noticed when we got to the briefing room 709 01:01:13,211 --> 01:01:18,842 was that there were more raf police on the door than was normal. 710 01:01:22,846 --> 01:01:25,307 We thought, well, you know, "what's going on?" 711 01:01:26,016 --> 01:01:27,475 And of course when we got in 712 01:01:27,559 --> 01:01:31,021 and sat down and they drew the curtains back 713 01:01:31,563 --> 01:01:33,440 we couldn't believe what we were seeing. 714 01:01:35,901 --> 01:01:39,654 The ribbon going all the way up the north sea 715 01:01:40,238 --> 01:01:44,367 across Denmark to a tiny place 716 01:01:45,035 --> 01:01:46,328 called peenemunde. 717 01:01:48,079 --> 01:01:50,081 It was a strange feeling 718 01:01:50,165 --> 01:01:55,253 to know that we were going a little bit into the unknown. 719 01:02:00,634 --> 01:02:04,221 Ernie: Peenemunde was... it was a long journey. 720 01:02:06,514 --> 01:02:07,724 Full moon. 721 01:02:08,600 --> 01:02:10,977 To try that over Germany... 722 01:02:11,770 --> 01:02:12,896 Suicide. 723 01:02:21,404 --> 01:02:25,325 So we went low level across the north sea. 724 01:02:31,790 --> 01:02:37,254 George: We were told that it was a very, very important target 725 01:02:37,629 --> 01:02:41,800 which could affect the outcome of the war. 726 01:02:43,468 --> 01:02:47,097 And if we didn't do the job that night 727 01:02:47,764 --> 01:02:49,432 we'd go back the following night 728 01:02:50,016 --> 01:02:53,270 and the night after, and the night after that 729 01:02:54,020 --> 01:02:55,814 until it was obliterated. 730 01:03:08,451 --> 01:03:13,957 Ernie: And then arriving at the target, you could see everything quite clearly. 731 01:03:16,459 --> 01:03:22,465 A brilliant, lovely night, and yet we were there to destroy and kill. 732 01:03:40,859 --> 01:03:42,902 George: When we went in on our bombing run 733 01:03:43,361 --> 01:03:45,947 there was a bit of flak, not too serious 734 01:03:46,364 --> 01:03:49,617 and we were able to bomb and get out 735 01:03:51,286 --> 01:03:53,246 without too much trouble. 736 01:03:55,707 --> 01:03:59,961 Ernie: You could clearly see the ground and what you were trying to hit. 737 01:04:03,131 --> 01:04:06,176 George: But of course it was a brilliant moonlight night. 738 01:04:07,093 --> 01:04:11,181 When the fighters got there, they had a bit of a field day. 739 01:04:16,144 --> 01:04:18,938 We lost over 40 aircraft. 740 01:04:24,110 --> 01:04:27,447 Narrator: 245 baf aircrew were killed 741 01:04:28,531 --> 01:04:31,618 along with approximately 700 people on the ground 742 01:04:34,329 --> 01:04:37,832 but the raid delayed development of the rockets by many months. 743 01:04:41,127 --> 01:04:44,964 It was enough to ensure that the v— weapons would not be the war winner 744 01:04:45,048 --> 01:04:46,466 that Hitler hoped for. 745 01:04:49,677 --> 01:04:53,973 George: We were quite proud to think that we'd taken part in that 746 01:04:54,349 --> 01:04:59,396 and of course very much relieved that we didn't have to go back 747 01:05:01,940 --> 01:05:03,149 cos that was... 748 01:05:04,317 --> 01:05:08,822 Well, we thought that that would be it 749 01:05:09,197 --> 01:05:10,365 if we had to go back. 750 01:05:11,950 --> 01:05:15,245 That that would... that would be... That would be the chop. 751 01:05:20,041 --> 01:05:22,794 So that was a huge sigh of relief. 752 01:05:24,546 --> 01:05:26,214 We were stood down. 753 01:05:33,179 --> 01:05:35,974 Peter: The most atmospheric place you can ever be 754 01:05:36,057 --> 01:05:37,684 is in a bomber station. 755 01:05:37,892 --> 01:05:42,355 If there's been a stand down for two days, there's a station dance 756 01:05:42,439 --> 01:05:45,733 and every station had got a dance band of some sort. 757 01:05:45,817 --> 01:05:47,485 Man: A one, two. — fingers click 758 01:05:47,569 --> 01:05:50,363 music: "Little brown jug" by Glenn Miller 759 01:05:57,495 --> 01:06:00,457 Peter: They used to use the hangars, they'd push the aeroplanes back 760 01:06:00,540 --> 01:06:04,752 there's a bar, there's the station band belting out Glenn Miller. 761 01:06:08,256 --> 01:06:09,632 It's... it's electric. 762 01:06:10,884 --> 01:06:12,010 Electric. 763 01:06:18,600 --> 01:06:20,685 Elizabeth: We laughed and joked with each other 764 01:06:20,768 --> 01:06:22,479 and some paired off. 765 01:06:24,314 --> 01:06:27,859 Some were a bit naughty and... you know. 766 01:06:30,195 --> 01:06:32,655 Be'i'i'y tring: These boys became very precious. 767 01:06:32,739 --> 01:06:33,823 Very precious. 768 01:06:34,240 --> 01:06:35,742 They were bomber crew. 769 01:06:36,409 --> 01:06:40,371 Just to hold hands or hug a boy was magic. 770 01:06:45,543 --> 01:06:47,462 Rusty: Beer and girls. 771 01:06:48,046 --> 01:06:49,255 And this was the... 772 01:06:49,506 --> 01:06:52,425 We drank an awful lot, even when you weren't flying. 773 01:06:52,884 --> 01:06:54,761 Six, eight pints a night was nothing. 774 01:06:55,053 --> 01:06:57,180 You never knew the guy that you were drinking with 775 01:06:57,263 --> 01:06:58,908 whether he's going to be there tomorrow or not. 776 01:06:58,932 --> 01:07:00,266 We took it for granted. 777 01:07:04,354 --> 01:07:06,481 George: You didn't sit in the mess and dwell 778 01:07:06,856 --> 01:07:08,274 you just got on with living. 779 01:07:11,319 --> 01:07:14,364 Rusty: And the girls were so affectionate and so lovely. 780 01:07:14,614 --> 01:07:15,657 Charles, look. 781 01:07:16,533 --> 01:07:18,076 Who's that smasher over there? 782 01:07:18,660 --> 01:07:22,121 One of my friends said, "thank god for sex, it's kept me sane". 783 01:07:22,205 --> 01:07:24,005 What would you say if I asked you for a dance? 784 01:07:24,040 --> 01:07:26,292 I should rather be saying... yes. — lovely. 785 01:07:28,336 --> 01:07:29,336 Well, I'm damned. 786 01:07:32,882 --> 01:07:34,634 Wendy: Well, I met this young man 787 01:07:34,717 --> 01:07:39,264 his name was Bruce, he was a pilot in a lanc. 788 01:07:40,348 --> 01:07:42,350 And he asked me to dance 789 01:07:44,018 --> 01:07:46,896 and I mean, we just... 790 01:07:47,522 --> 01:07:49,941 You know, we fell in love really. 791 01:07:52,151 --> 01:07:55,280 We used to meet whenever he wasn't on ops 792 01:07:56,030 --> 01:07:57,574 or I wasn't on duty. 793 01:07:59,284 --> 01:08:00,952 So that was just wonderful. 794 01:08:06,916 --> 01:08:11,212 And yet we never spoke about what he did. 795 01:08:11,838 --> 01:08:13,381 We didn't talk about it. 796 01:08:14,007 --> 01:08:15,967 And in a way it was right really. 797 01:08:16,759 --> 01:08:17,759 That was done. 798 01:08:19,012 --> 01:08:20,597 And then it was on to the next one. 799 01:08:29,522 --> 01:08:31,858 Engine roars into life 800 01:08:52,837 --> 01:08:55,557 Wynford vaughan—thomas: The green light flashes on the control tower. 801 01:08:55,590 --> 01:08:59,510 It's our turn to go now as we start to slowly gather speed 802 01:08:59,594 --> 01:09:02,263 down the mile—and—a—half—long runway. 803 01:09:13,900 --> 01:09:16,903 Narrator: For eight months from August 7943 804 01:09:17,612 --> 01:09:20,615 one in three of bomber command's major operations 805 01:09:20,990 --> 01:09:23,076 were against Germany's capital. 806 01:09:26,537 --> 01:09:28,039 Harris said to Churchill 807 01:09:28,748 --> 01:09:34,420 ”we can wreck Berlin from end to end if the us army air force will come in on it. 808 01:09:35,338 --> 01:09:38,716 It will cost between us 400 to 500 aircraft. 809 01:09:39,676 --> 01:09:42,845 It will cost Germany the war. ” 810 01:09:47,725 --> 01:09:50,205 Wynford on recording: We're crossing the coast in good company. 811 01:09:50,687 --> 01:09:55,024 Another Lancaster away and over our broad starboard wing. 812 01:09:56,234 --> 01:09:59,862 Right before us now is the darkness and Germany. 813 01:10:00,363 --> 01:10:03,866 Rusty: It was a long way, four hours to Berlin 814 01:10:03,950 --> 01:10:06,327 and then you had to get four hours back. 815 01:10:06,994 --> 01:10:08,639 George: At the back of your mind you were thinking 816 01:10:08,663 --> 01:10:11,708 "well, Berlin is gonna be very heavily defended" 817 01:10:12,250 --> 01:10:16,879 so you were a bit apprehensive as to what you might expect. 818 01:10:18,297 --> 01:10:20,466 Chick: The Germans became very adept, of course. 819 01:10:21,259 --> 01:10:23,219 Our bombing techniques improved 820 01:10:23,845 --> 01:10:27,598 but also German technique of shooting us down improved. 821 01:10:29,934 --> 01:10:34,647 Wynford on recording: I'm just glancing back now, I can see our mid upper gunner 822 01:10:34,731 --> 01:10:38,484 his turret moving, searching in the darkness. 823 01:10:40,611 --> 01:10:42,697 We're in the land of the night fighter. 824 01:10:45,742 --> 01:10:47,827 The first thing would be the thunder of guns. 825 01:10:47,910 --> 01:10:49,829 Man: Fighter coming in port quarter, skipper! 826 01:10:50,079 --> 01:10:52,165 I screamed, "corkscrew starboard go!" 827 01:10:55,877 --> 01:10:58,212 The evasive manoeuvre was corkscrew. 828 01:11:01,090 --> 01:11:02,759 You put full aileron on 829 01:11:02,842 --> 01:11:06,137 you pushed the stick right down to 360 miles an hour. 830 01:11:06,345 --> 01:11:07,472 When you get to the bottom 831 01:11:07,555 --> 01:11:10,600 with some physical effort, you pull the bloody thing like that 832 01:11:10,683 --> 01:11:12,185 and pull it up the other side. 833 01:11:12,393 --> 01:11:16,814 You dived down and climbed up and you're flying this corkscrew pattern. 834 01:11:20,151 --> 01:11:22,528 Wynford on recording: Down goes the nose of the Lancaster. 835 01:11:24,864 --> 01:11:27,241 We feel like as if we've been flung around. 836 01:11:27,533 --> 01:11:30,661 A furious angle, up comes our starboard wing. 837 01:11:31,579 --> 01:11:35,082 And then you repeat the operation by which time either you're dead 838 01:11:35,166 --> 01:11:36,667 or he's shoved off. 839 01:11:38,044 --> 01:11:41,714 Wynford on recording: First thing we can see now is a stream of red sparks. 840 01:11:41,964 --> 01:11:45,384 Away to the starboard, tracer from night fighters. 841 01:11:46,844 --> 01:11:50,723 I saw a tracer and I'm like "where is the so and so?" 842 01:11:50,807 --> 01:11:52,934 And all of a sudden he's appeared 843 01:11:53,643 --> 01:11:56,270 and I just kept my fingers on the triggers. 844 01:11:56,938 --> 01:11:58,481 Machine guns rati'le 845 01:11:58,731 --> 01:12:02,193 and then I saw licks of flames coming off his wings. 846 01:12:02,443 --> 01:12:05,154 And all of a sudden he turned over and went down in flames. 847 01:12:05,238 --> 01:12:06,614 I got him! I got him! 848 01:12:07,740 --> 01:12:10,743 And I thought to myself then, "I hope my bullets have killed them" 849 01:12:11,077 --> 01:12:13,955 cos there's nothing worse than to die by fire. 850 01:12:16,999 --> 01:12:18,959 Wynford on recording: Look! Look! They've got him! 851 01:12:20,378 --> 01:12:22,964 The boys, they make it a junkers 88. 852 01:12:28,803 --> 01:12:30,471 Bob: I only did two berlins. 853 01:12:32,974 --> 01:12:35,977 Jack Watson: We did four trips on Berlin altogether. 854 01:12:38,145 --> 01:12:41,023 Chick: I think I did six if I remember rightly. 855 01:12:43,234 --> 01:12:47,280 Ernie: I think I made seven raids on Berlin. 856 01:12:50,032 --> 01:12:51,617 John: We went there eight times. 857 01:12:52,243 --> 01:12:53,619 Eight trips to Berlin. 858 01:12:55,162 --> 01:12:59,667 So we knew the way, we knew what it was gonna be like. 859 01:13:05,798 --> 01:13:07,800 Bombs explode 860 01:13:12,430 --> 01:13:14,015 chick: There was a tremendous explosion. 861 01:13:14,223 --> 01:13:15,558 Tremendous, woof! 862 01:13:15,850 --> 01:13:16,893 Bombs explode 863 01:13:16,976 --> 01:13:18,144 port outer engine's on fire! 864 01:13:18,227 --> 01:13:20,062 Chick: Everything happened in slow motion. 865 01:13:20,146 --> 01:13:21,898 I mean ultra—slow motion. 866 01:13:22,857 --> 01:13:26,527 You felt yourself going, you went down like a sack of bricks. 867 01:13:27,820 --> 01:13:29,405 And as you were going down 868 01:13:29,739 --> 01:13:34,285 you saw sparks going above the cockpit. 869 01:13:34,368 --> 01:13:36,287 Machine guns rati'le 870 01:13:36,829 --> 01:13:42,585 what I thought was sparks were in fact tracer shells from an me 110 871 01:13:42,668 --> 01:13:44,378 that was attacking us and I didn't know. 872 01:13:45,671 --> 01:13:46,714 Gunfire 873 01:13:46,881 --> 01:13:48,721 and I could hear the screams of the bomb aimer. 874 01:13:50,927 --> 01:13:54,388 So I went to the nose of the aircraft and well, dreadful sight. 875 01:13:54,472 --> 01:13:57,391 I... actually, I vomited. 876 01:13:58,601 --> 01:13:59,602 He was dead. 877 01:14:02,730 --> 01:14:06,192 And then the wireless op, he died on the way back in fact. 878 01:14:10,279 --> 01:14:12,615 For some unaccountable reason 879 01:14:13,574 --> 01:14:15,534 perhaps I resigned myself to my fate 880 01:14:15,618 --> 01:14:17,703 or perhaps I was too busy working out the fuel 881 01:14:17,995 --> 01:14:18,995 I wasn't frightened. 882 01:14:19,038 --> 01:14:21,838 That was the only time I wasn't absolutely petrified. I don't know why. 883 01:14:24,794 --> 01:14:27,630 Couldn't raise the bomb doors, couldn't lower the under carriage 884 01:14:27,713 --> 01:14:29,048 couldn't use the flaps. 885 01:14:30,758 --> 01:14:34,929 And we descended quite rapidly until we reached the coast. 886 01:14:35,888 --> 01:14:37,574 Wynford on recording: Our first sight of england 887 01:14:37,598 --> 01:14:43,104 a little light from a beacon flashing up to us from the darkness below. 888 01:14:52,113 --> 01:14:56,033 We all here heed a heartfelt sigh of relief. 889 01:14:59,161 --> 01:15:02,206 Chick: We landed, I was the first one out 890 01:15:02,748 --> 01:15:06,043 and the thing I remember vividly was kissing the ground. 891 01:15:11,298 --> 01:15:13,175 Wendy: Well, I used to ring him every day 892 01:15:13,259 --> 01:15:18,097 but you had to ring before 12 o'clock because once they'd had the first briefing 893 01:15:18,180 --> 01:15:19,181 you couldn't. 894 01:15:20,683 --> 01:15:24,645 And this particular day, I didn't get to the phone in time 895 01:15:25,563 --> 01:15:27,440 and I didn't speak to him. 896 01:15:29,316 --> 01:15:34,321 And next morning, I knew the moment I walked in that he hadn't come back. 897 01:15:40,119 --> 01:15:41,537 I was devastated. 898 01:15:42,621 --> 01:15:47,293 And I was so, so, so devastated I wasn't able to say 899 01:15:47,376 --> 01:15:48,919 "goodbye, darling. God bless." 900 01:15:51,297 --> 01:15:53,132 I felt it was almost my fault. 901 01:15:56,886 --> 01:15:57,970 But that was war. 902 01:16:00,639 --> 01:16:01,639 Yes. 903 01:16:09,190 --> 01:16:11,776 He was only 22 when he died. 904 01:16:24,121 --> 01:16:26,957 Narrator: The battle of Berlin was in its final phase 905 01:16:27,917 --> 01:16:32,296 but it had not, as Harris had promised, cost Germany the war. 906 01:16:33,881 --> 01:16:38,511 Baf losses continued to mount, yet in march 7944 907 01:16:38,594 --> 01:16:42,473 Harris insisted on one last operation in the campaign 908 01:16:43,474 --> 01:16:45,726 despite being advised against it. 909 01:16:50,022 --> 01:16:53,234 However, the final trip was not to Berlin 910 01:16:53,818 --> 01:16:57,863 but nuremberg, symbolic home of the Nazis. 911 01:17:00,282 --> 01:17:01,784 Rusty: The weather forecast was 912 01:17:01,867 --> 01:17:04,245 "you're gonna be in cloud all the way to the target 913 01:17:04,620 --> 01:17:06,038 and the target's gonna be clear." 914 01:17:07,164 --> 01:17:10,584 But a freak wind came up and blew all the cloud away 915 01:17:11,293 --> 01:17:14,213 and when you had a clear night with this lovely moon 916 01:17:14,296 --> 01:17:15,840 it was like flying in daylight. 917 01:17:27,685 --> 01:17:29,145 Chick: Very bright moon that night. 918 01:17:30,688 --> 01:17:32,773 Another Lancaster moved across. 919 01:17:34,483 --> 01:17:36,610 And suddenly, with no warning whatsoever... 920 01:17:37,903 --> 01:17:38,903 Boom! Gone. 921 01:17:41,699 --> 01:17:44,827 Rusty: The Germans had sent 240 night fighters 922 01:17:44,910 --> 01:17:46,662 right into the bomber stream. 923 01:17:47,121 --> 01:17:48,706 We saw them flashing past 924 01:17:48,998 --> 01:17:52,376 but we'd see aircraft just blowing up and disappearing 925 01:17:52,626 --> 01:17:55,045 others literally just falling out of the sky. 926 01:17:57,506 --> 01:18:01,468 We saw over 40 aircraft, separate aircraft 927 01:18:01,552 --> 01:18:03,721 reported by the crew as going down. 928 01:18:07,600 --> 01:18:10,936 Jack Watson: We were sitting ducks shot to buggery. 929 01:18:11,437 --> 01:18:15,816 The last 200 miles was just a straight run in to nuremberg. 930 01:18:19,612 --> 01:18:23,574 Rusty: But instead of being clearer, it was cloudy over nuremberg 931 01:18:24,283 --> 01:18:27,286 and most of the aircraft missed the target. 932 01:18:28,162 --> 01:18:30,456 So the raid was a failure. 933 01:18:32,666 --> 01:18:34,793 Birds twiti'er 934 01:18:38,797 --> 01:18:42,092 rusty: When we'd landed and got out the aircraft 935 01:18:42,885 --> 01:18:47,806 normally you were chatty and a bit exuberant, but that night we never spoke. 936 01:18:48,515 --> 01:18:51,185 Just said "hello", "alright?" 937 01:18:53,020 --> 01:18:54,146 Well, how do you get on? 938 01:18:54,271 --> 01:18:56,398 Rusty: And then we had to go to be debriefed. 939 01:18:56,482 --> 01:18:58,901 Indistinct chati'er 940 01:19:02,029 --> 01:19:05,824 chick: We actually saw 50 plus aircraft shot down. 941 01:19:05,908 --> 01:19:07,076 We actually saw it. 942 01:19:07,534 --> 01:19:10,287 But when we landed back at base, they wouldn't believe us. 943 01:19:10,371 --> 01:19:12,390 They said, "well, you saw it, you saw it, you saw it. 944 01:19:12,414 --> 01:19:14,124 That's only one aeroplane, not three." 945 01:19:14,208 --> 01:19:15,501 The crew were a mad lot. 946 01:19:15,584 --> 01:19:18,128 They used to have a little kitty in between them 947 01:19:18,212 --> 01:19:22,716 and the one who guessed most accurately the number of aircraft shot down 948 01:19:22,841 --> 01:19:23,926 got the kitty. 949 01:19:24,176 --> 01:19:28,681 And curly, cos he was looking out all the time, said "ooh, 60 to 100". 950 01:19:29,181 --> 01:19:30,975 And he won the kitty that night 951 01:19:31,183 --> 01:19:34,979 because 96 aircraft were shot down over Germany. 952 01:19:36,230 --> 01:19:37,606 Ninety—six. 953 01:19:38,899 --> 01:19:40,776 In one night. 954 01:19:43,821 --> 01:19:49,743 That's 672 empty chairs at breakfast. 955 01:19:58,127 --> 01:20:01,255 Bill gould: Empty chairs at empty tables. 956 01:20:02,756 --> 01:20:06,302 That's where John used to sit, that's where Harry used to sit. 957 01:20:09,054 --> 01:20:12,766 Narrator: Bomber command lost more aircrew on that one night 958 01:20:13,100 --> 01:20:16,812 than fighter command during the entire battle of britain. 959 01:20:19,023 --> 01:20:21,608 John: At night you could see other aircraft 960 01:20:21,692 --> 01:20:24,737 and you could certainly see them being shot down. 961 01:20:25,529 --> 01:20:29,533 We all saw them and our attitude was "it's not our turn tonight". 962 01:20:30,367 --> 01:20:33,329 You know, you sympathise, you're sorry to see them go 963 01:20:33,412 --> 01:20:36,248 but your attitude is, "well, it's not our turn. 964 01:20:36,332 --> 01:20:39,001 It might be tomorrow night, but it's not our turn tonight." 965 01:20:42,087 --> 01:20:46,592 Charles: We never thought that anything was going to happen to us. 966 01:20:46,967 --> 01:20:48,844 When I look back, it's crazy. 967 01:20:48,927 --> 01:20:53,599 I mean, the odds were staring you in the face. 968 01:20:56,268 --> 01:20:59,313 Ron: In the mess, if anybody disappeared 969 01:20:59,897 --> 01:21:02,775 we'd just shout "hard luck! Hard luck". 970 01:21:03,692 --> 01:21:05,277 Tom's gone. "Hard luck!" 971 01:21:05,736 --> 01:21:07,321 That's the only way we could do it. 972 01:21:11,408 --> 01:21:12,910 Rusty: When somebody got the chop 973 01:21:12,993 --> 01:21:16,538 you used to go down to the mess and say, "here's to good old so and so 974 01:21:16,622 --> 01:21:18,207 and here's to the next one to die." 975 01:21:18,791 --> 01:21:21,251 And you just accepted you weren't gonna live. 976 01:21:25,547 --> 01:21:27,257 Neil: One accepts certain things in a war 977 01:21:27,341 --> 01:21:29,927 that you don't accept in life, and you don't think about it. 978 01:21:30,969 --> 01:21:33,389 It's sad to talk about these things. 979 01:21:33,972 --> 01:21:37,476 Very... um, moving. 980 01:21:42,189 --> 01:21:44,858 Narrator: According to bomber command's official histoiy 981 01:21:45,150 --> 01:21:47,653 the battle of Berlin was more than a failure. 982 01:21:48,862 --> 01:21:49,988 It was a defeat 983 01:21:51,990 --> 01:21:54,535 ouestions were asked of Harris ' leadership 984 01:21:55,160 --> 01:21:58,789 and a week after the nuremberg raid, he threatened to resign. 985 01:22:00,165 --> 01:22:02,042 His superiors backed down. 986 01:22:04,253 --> 01:22:06,422 But change was in the air. 987 01:22:13,971 --> 01:22:16,181 In the spring of 7944 988 01:22:16,265 --> 01:22:19,184 bomber command was put under temporaiy new management 989 01:22:20,894 --> 01:22:22,980 allied generals needed the heavy bombers 990 01:22:23,063 --> 01:22:25,858 to pave the way for the liberation of Europe. 991 01:22:28,068 --> 01:22:29,379 Archive reporter: The German gunners 992 01:22:29,403 --> 01:22:31,697 and coast defence troops along the seine bay 993 01:22:31,864 --> 01:22:34,575 were called very early on the morning of June 6th 994 01:22:34,908 --> 01:22:37,619 by 8500 tons of bombs 995 01:22:37,703 --> 01:22:40,873 dropped upon them by lancasters and halifaxes of bomber command 996 01:22:41,165 --> 01:22:44,293 fortresses and liberators of the United States air force. 997 01:22:44,710 --> 01:22:49,465 Bill purdy: We were told that we were going to be sent 998 01:22:49,548 --> 01:22:52,843 to a beach off the coast of normandy 999 01:22:53,260 --> 01:22:57,139 and bomb a target, five naval guns 1000 01:22:57,556 --> 01:23:03,061 and no one knew that it was in fact, the run up to d—day. 1001 01:23:12,321 --> 01:23:14,698 So we were to cross and to drop 1002 01:23:15,115 --> 01:23:18,619 probably 1800 thousand pound bombs 1003 01:23:18,702 --> 01:23:22,331 on an area less than a city block, for sure. 1004 01:23:26,877 --> 01:23:29,630 And it just wiped out the whole place. 1005 01:23:29,713 --> 01:23:31,924 We took half the cliff and the gun emplacements 1006 01:23:32,007 --> 01:23:33,008 everything else away. 1007 01:23:44,394 --> 01:23:46,605 And as we turned to come home 1008 01:23:47,189 --> 01:23:50,484 I'm sure we all just went, "ahh". 1009 01:23:56,949 --> 01:24:00,327 It was a sight that will never ever be seen again 1010 01:24:01,203 --> 01:24:05,207 because the first of the landing ships with the troops on were coming in. 1011 01:24:06,542 --> 01:24:08,001 That was the start of d—day. 1012 01:24:11,713 --> 01:24:13,674 Gerry norwood: As we come across the channel 1013 01:24:14,925 --> 01:24:19,346 we looked down, you couldn't see the sea for boats. 1014 01:24:19,805 --> 01:24:22,766 All the landing barges and everything was going in 1015 01:24:23,976 --> 01:24:28,522 the gliders were going in with the airborne divisions 1016 01:24:29,189 --> 01:24:31,817 and it was a magnificent sight. 1017 01:24:34,152 --> 01:24:36,280 Bill purdy: I reckon I could have put my wheels down 1018 01:24:36,363 --> 01:24:37,363 and taxied home 1019 01:24:37,406 --> 01:24:40,367 because there was just not a piece of the channel left for us. 1020 01:24:40,450 --> 01:24:42,369 It was just all covered with ships. 1021 01:24:56,300 --> 01:24:57,926 Narrator: The war was not won 1022 01:24:58,176 --> 01:25:00,012 but the tide was turning. 1023 01:25:01,847 --> 01:25:04,057 After four years of flying at night 1024 01:25:04,308 --> 01:25:06,977 bomber command resumed daylight operations. 1025 01:25:08,895 --> 01:25:11,231 With the allies in control of the air 1026 01:25:11,398 --> 01:25:17,070 the Lancaster and her crews would prove that precision bombing was now possible. 1027 01:25:24,036 --> 01:25:26,455 Our job was to be the heavy artillery. 1028 01:25:28,624 --> 01:25:33,295 The German troops and tanks assembled at the caen area 1029 01:25:35,005 --> 01:25:37,507 and we bombed very, very accurately 1030 01:25:39,843 --> 01:25:42,054 which bomber Harris didn't think we could manage. 1031 01:25:45,932 --> 01:25:48,727 Narrator: That pinpoint bombing was taken a step further 1032 01:25:48,810 --> 01:25:51,438 by the lifting capability of the Lancaster. 1033 01:25:53,065 --> 01:25:55,817 Barnes Wallis had developed two new bombs 1034 01:25:55,901 --> 01:25:58,070 that only the lanc could car/y. 1035 01:25:59,237 --> 01:26:02,407 John: One was the tallboy at 12,000 pounds 1036 01:26:03,408 --> 01:26:08,455 and the other was the grand slam at 22,000 pounds, the ten ton bomb. 1037 01:26:10,582 --> 01:26:12,417 So immediately after d—day 1038 01:26:12,834 --> 01:26:16,797 the squadron found itself equipped with the tallboy. 1039 01:26:20,717 --> 01:26:25,138 And the first operation was on a major rail tunnel. 1040 01:26:25,430 --> 01:26:27,641 German troops had been sent through that tunnel 1041 01:26:27,724 --> 01:26:30,352 heading towards the normandy beaches 1042 01:26:30,477 --> 01:26:33,522 and therefore it was essential to knock it out, which we did. 1043 01:26:39,611 --> 01:26:43,323 So we were achieving great accuracy with our bombing. 1044 01:26:43,407 --> 01:26:46,201 Engine rumbles 1045 01:26:49,079 --> 01:26:51,123 narrator: Yet despite these achievements 1046 01:26:51,373 --> 01:26:56,253 bomber command was still directed to continue area attacks at night 1047 01:26:57,921 --> 01:27:01,675 in februaiy 7945, the stage was set 1048 01:27:01,842 --> 01:27:04,594 for the most notorious bombing raid of the war. 1049 01:27:08,890 --> 01:27:11,768 Ursula: My father got me into a school in dresden 1050 01:27:12,102 --> 01:27:15,605 which was about 50 miles away 1051 01:27:15,689 --> 01:27:18,400 from my hometown, chemnitz. 1052 01:27:20,485 --> 01:27:24,406 Most of the war we felt safe and we were safe 1053 01:27:24,489 --> 01:27:26,825 because we were so far east. 1054 01:27:27,367 --> 01:27:30,620 In those days they didn't have enough fuel or whatever. 1055 01:27:30,996 --> 01:27:32,247 They didn't come to us. 1056 01:27:33,540 --> 01:27:34,875 Until later on. 1057 01:27:38,962 --> 01:27:40,839 Narrator: With the buss/ans advancing 1058 01:27:41,047 --> 01:27:47,053 Churchill was keen to assist and baste the Germans as they retreat from bres/au. 1059 01:27:48,513 --> 01:27:52,768 Four cities in front of the Soviet push were selected as potential targets. 1060 01:27:53,727 --> 01:27:57,647 Of those cities, the bed army requested that dresden 1061 01:27:57,731 --> 01:28:00,901 as an important transport hub, be bombed 1062 01:28:00,984 --> 01:28:04,780 to disrupt German reinforcements coming into the battle area. 1063 01:28:09,659 --> 01:28:13,038 Ursula: And dresden was full of refugees 1064 01:28:13,121 --> 01:28:16,458 who had run away from the Russian army coming. 1065 01:28:17,000 --> 01:28:21,213 They all came because, well, that was safe. 1066 01:28:22,839 --> 01:28:28,845 Music: "Waltz of the flowers" by Tchaikovsky 1067 01:28:29,387 --> 01:28:33,558 narrator: The attack was planned as a deliberate effort to destroy morale 1068 01:28:33,892 --> 01:28:36,394 and create chaos behind the front line. 1069 01:28:41,566 --> 01:28:44,402 Bill gould: I was born in stoke—on—trent 1070 01:28:45,028 --> 01:28:47,239 commonly known as the potteries 1071 01:28:48,698 --> 01:28:52,911 so dresden to me was meissen pottery. 1072 01:28:55,622 --> 01:28:58,917 That... that did affect me at the briefing 1073 01:28:59,501 --> 01:29:01,962 that I thought, "this is rather like... 1074 01:29:04,005 --> 01:29:06,091 Bombing stoke—on—trent." 1075 01:29:10,428 --> 01:29:12,347 Jack dark: The briefing was no different 1076 01:29:12,430 --> 01:29:13,723 to any other target. 1077 01:29:14,474 --> 01:29:17,811 We were told to Mark the marshalling yards and that sort of thing 1078 01:29:17,894 --> 01:29:19,396 in the centre of the town 1079 01:29:19,729 --> 01:29:24,150 and we were told it was to help the Russian advance. 1080 01:29:27,612 --> 01:29:30,115 Jack Watson: People think that we bombed a little town 1081 01:29:30,198 --> 01:29:32,826 that was full of shops selling dresden China. 1082 01:29:33,410 --> 01:29:36,121 It wasn't, it was full of munition factories. 1083 01:29:36,246 --> 01:29:41,001 It was also a staging point for the people defending Berlin. 1084 01:29:44,754 --> 01:29:47,424 Narrator: This was bomber command at the height of its power. 1085 01:29:48,675 --> 01:29:51,177 One thousand six hundred heavy bombers 1086 01:29:51,261 --> 01:29:55,515 three quarters of which were lancasters, in 73 squadrons. 1087 01:29:57,684 --> 01:30:01,271 And dresden would be an all—lancaster operation. 1088 01:30:01,980 --> 01:30:06,067 796 of the aircraft were launched against the city. 1089 01:30:10,113 --> 01:30:12,365 Laurie: I remember at the time we thought... 1090 01:30:13,241 --> 01:30:15,035 Well, I don't know what's the right word 1091 01:30:15,118 --> 01:30:20,790 very privileged to be going on such a big raid 1092 01:30:21,249 --> 01:30:23,376 at such an important stage. 1093 01:30:31,468 --> 01:30:33,929 Ursula: And then on the 13th of February 1094 01:30:37,057 --> 01:30:41,269 I was at home in chemnitz on half term. 1095 01:30:43,438 --> 01:30:45,148 I was then 16 1096 01:30:46,358 --> 01:30:50,779 and we could hear the Lancaster squadrons above us coming. 1097 01:30:53,740 --> 01:30:56,785 You could hear it on the glass vibrating. 1098 01:30:56,993 --> 01:31:00,163 Such big squadrons coming over. 1099 01:31:00,705 --> 01:31:01,705 So many. 1100 01:31:03,875 --> 01:31:07,545 The sound of it alone made you frightened. 1101 01:31:07,712 --> 01:31:11,007 Engines rumble 1102 01:31:22,936 --> 01:31:25,105 And we thought, "that must be dresden." 1103 01:31:25,271 --> 01:31:28,400 That's the direction, you know? "That's dresden. 1104 01:31:28,483 --> 01:31:31,361 They got... they gone... They're bombing dresden." 1105 01:31:42,247 --> 01:31:46,167 Jack dark: We were dropping a target indicator on dresden. 1106 01:31:49,629 --> 01:31:52,674 We were pathfinders, we were one of the first. 1107 01:31:53,925 --> 01:31:57,303 We were about three or four minutes before main force 1108 01:31:58,013 --> 01:32:01,808 and it gave us a little bit of leeway. 1109 01:32:03,560 --> 01:32:06,479 Main force were then called in to bomb. 1110 01:32:08,356 --> 01:32:10,316 Explosions boom 1111 01:32:24,831 --> 01:32:29,002 Laurie: We got to a point where the bomb aimer took over for the run in 1112 01:32:29,085 --> 01:32:31,463 and I could see out of the dome. 1113 01:32:32,255 --> 01:32:35,884 I can't relate to anything 1114 01:32:35,967 --> 01:32:38,595 where the fire and the destruction 1115 01:32:38,678 --> 01:32:42,265 was so vast over an area as dresden. 1116 01:32:50,523 --> 01:32:52,525 Ursula: And it was such an inferno 1117 01:32:53,109 --> 01:32:57,405 that we saw it on the sky going red at night. 1118 01:33:05,246 --> 01:33:07,999 Tom: As the rear gunner, coming out of dresden 1119 01:33:08,166 --> 01:33:11,669 all I could see was one massive great red sky 1120 01:33:12,420 --> 01:33:15,715 and I could see those flames over a hundred mile away. 1121 01:33:15,924 --> 01:33:17,444 You could see the big glow in the sky. 1122 01:33:18,676 --> 01:33:22,347 Every single way you looked was red with flames. 1123 01:33:24,224 --> 01:33:26,452 Archive reporter: As daylight broke on the returning lancasters 1124 01:33:26,476 --> 01:33:28,937 a huge force of American fortresses and liberators 1125 01:33:29,020 --> 01:33:30,605 were rising from British airfields. 1126 01:33:31,606 --> 01:33:35,151 For 450 of them, the target was again dresden. 1127 01:33:35,860 --> 01:33:38,905 The beauty of these aircraft in flight is in curious contrast 1128 01:33:38,988 --> 01:33:41,616 to the unavoidable ugliness of their essential mission. 1129 01:33:41,908 --> 01:33:43,660 Ursula: Well, of course I lost my school. 1130 01:33:43,743 --> 01:33:44,953 I never saw it again. 1131 01:33:45,495 --> 01:33:47,080 Nobody ever went back. 1132 01:33:48,998 --> 01:33:51,251 It was a terrible destruction 1133 01:33:51,960 --> 01:33:56,339 and the dead just lying around in heaps. 1134 01:33:57,799 --> 01:33:59,801 Mountains of dead people 1135 01:34:02,762 --> 01:34:04,389 which had burned to death. 1136 01:34:06,182 --> 01:34:07,934 It was really terrible. 1137 01:34:13,356 --> 01:34:16,359 Narrator: Approximately 25, 000 people were killed 1138 01:34:16,442 --> 01:34:18,069 in the attacks on dresden. 1139 01:34:21,698 --> 01:34:25,493 For lads 19, 20, 21... 1140 01:34:28,454 --> 01:34:30,540 We'd never known maturity 1141 01:34:31,499 --> 01:34:35,253 because we'd lived in a strange world. 1142 01:34:37,547 --> 01:34:39,215 One where we would go out 1143 01:34:39,799 --> 01:34:43,970 and we would have killed hundreds of people that night 1144 01:34:46,389 --> 01:34:48,600 and not known a thing about it. 1145 01:34:51,603 --> 01:34:54,063 War's a dirty business, isn't it? 1146 01:34:58,735 --> 01:35:00,361 Narrator: A month after dresden 1147 01:35:00,862 --> 01:35:05,200 Churchill sent a draft memo to Charles portal, head of the raf 1148 01:35:05,491 --> 01:35:07,452 critical of bombing policy. 1149 01:35:08,661 --> 01:35:12,415 Although it was later re— written, lasting damage was done 1150 01:35:12,498 --> 01:35:16,127 to both bomber command's and Harris ' reputations. 1151 01:35:17,712 --> 01:35:20,381 Rusty: I'm pretty sure politics came into this 1152 01:35:20,548 --> 01:35:24,552 cos Harris, obviously he wasn't the easiest bloke to get on with 1153 01:35:25,470 --> 01:35:29,515 but his instructions came from air ministry and the government. 1154 01:35:30,433 --> 01:35:35,271 Churchill sent to the portal a list of targets 1155 01:35:35,355 --> 01:35:36,439 which had to be bombed. 1156 01:35:36,522 --> 01:35:38,566 When he wore his tin hat he was good. 1157 01:35:39,359 --> 01:35:42,237 When he put his bowler on, he was a different man altogether, wasn't he? 1158 01:35:42,320 --> 01:35:44,030 He was more interested in politics 1159 01:35:44,405 --> 01:35:46,407 and winning an election than the war, wasn't he? 1160 01:35:46,491 --> 01:35:48,493 And he wanted to wash his hands of dresden. 1161 01:35:48,576 --> 01:35:50,787 Well, he couldn't because he ordered it. 1162 01:35:50,912 --> 01:35:55,750 He was afraid of the consequences, that he'd ordered this slaughter 1163 01:35:56,459 --> 01:36:00,463 and when it had been accomplished he didn't want to know. 1164 01:36:01,005 --> 01:36:04,175 So poor old Harris was blamed 1165 01:36:04,467 --> 01:36:07,053 for what the politicians had told him what to do 1166 01:36:07,262 --> 01:36:08,930 so he carried the can. 1167 01:36:28,741 --> 01:36:33,579 Narrator: The war in Europe ended on may 8th, 7945. 1168 01:36:35,999 --> 01:36:39,127 George: I still think that it was necessary. 1169 01:36:41,170 --> 01:36:44,257 We lost a lot of men, we lost women and children 1170 01:36:44,340 --> 01:36:46,050 and so did the Germans. 1171 01:36:47,510 --> 01:36:51,264 But then, wherever you go, war is war, isn't it? 1172 01:36:51,931 --> 01:36:56,185 And it's always the civilians that cop it the worst. 1173 01:36:59,063 --> 01:37:04,277 I suppose one could say that it was futile really 1174 01:37:04,694 --> 01:37:09,866 but what would have happened if we hadn't have gone to war with Germany 1175 01:37:10,825 --> 01:37:12,118 and did what we did? 1176 01:37:17,915 --> 01:37:20,668 Jack Watson: We know now that they killed six million Jews. 1177 01:37:24,881 --> 01:37:30,803 Any country which can sanction that deserves any punishment that they can get. 1178 01:37:33,431 --> 01:37:37,101 If we hadn't have bombed Germany, we wouldn't have won the war. 1179 01:37:40,813 --> 01:37:44,984 So I think that that saved a lot of lives 1180 01:37:45,276 --> 01:37:47,278 and in the concentration camps. 1181 01:37:52,450 --> 01:37:54,577 Ursula: There wasn't much left of Berlin, was there? 1182 01:37:55,787 --> 01:38:01,918 Or Cologne or Frankfurt, or bremen or Munich in the south. 1183 01:38:03,211 --> 01:38:04,712 I know it was terrible 1184 01:38:04,796 --> 01:38:09,967 but I mean to say, what could you do here in england fighting the Germans? 1185 01:38:10,051 --> 01:38:13,429 That was the way they fought each other, was bombing each other. 1186 01:38:14,389 --> 01:38:15,389 I mean 1187 01:38:15,598 --> 01:38:18,810 I didn't think that, well, I was too young then 1188 01:38:18,976 --> 01:38:22,230 but now I think, "what else could they have done?" 1189 01:38:45,795 --> 01:38:47,755 Seb Davey: The world that we live in today 1190 01:38:48,881 --> 01:38:53,219 owes a lot to what those guys did 75 years ago. 1191 01:38:55,346 --> 01:38:57,890 This aircraft is a living memorial. 1192 01:38:59,434 --> 01:39:04,147 It has an emotional effect on people, probably down to what she represents 1193 01:39:04,856 --> 01:39:10,027 because of 125,000 bomber command aircrew 1194 01:39:10,111 --> 01:39:13,030 of whom all were volunteers 1195 01:39:14,282 --> 01:39:18,411 55,573 is the official figure 1196 01:39:18,494 --> 01:39:19,579 for those that were lost 1197 01:39:19,662 --> 01:39:22,373 and that does not include life—changing injuries 1198 01:39:22,457 --> 01:39:24,125 that we would possibly count today. 1199 01:39:27,003 --> 01:39:31,090 So there are very few families in this country 1200 01:39:31,174 --> 01:39:34,552 who don't know someone who was involved in some way 1201 01:39:34,635 --> 01:39:35,803 with bomber command. 1202 01:39:44,562 --> 01:39:48,024 The greatest feeling you get when boarding the aircraft 1203 01:39:48,107 --> 01:39:51,277 and making your way to your seat and sitting there 1204 01:39:51,360 --> 01:39:54,363 is thinking about the guys who did this before you 1205 01:39:54,447 --> 01:39:58,201 and you can't help but think how the mixture of emotions 1206 01:39:58,284 --> 01:40:01,829 must have been affecting these much younger chaps than us 1207 01:40:02,163 --> 01:40:05,958 as they climbed on board to carry out the task that they were given. 1208 01:40:12,423 --> 01:40:14,509 But also we have a tradition 1209 01:40:14,592 --> 01:40:16,552 that every time we get on board the Lancaster 1210 01:40:16,844 --> 01:40:20,264 we have a memorial plaque to the rear of the aircraft that we touch 1211 01:40:20,348 --> 01:40:22,099 and the idea is that by touching this 1212 01:40:22,183 --> 01:40:24,352 we're taking some of those guys along with us. 1213 01:40:24,977 --> 01:40:27,688 We all do it and all think about them when we get on board. 1214 01:40:29,815 --> 01:40:31,067 Switching off. Got that! 1215 01:41:04,225 --> 01:41:05,476 Jo: At the end of the war 1216 01:41:06,102 --> 01:41:11,232 all the top politicians didn't seem to want to know about us 1217 01:41:12,858 --> 01:41:14,610 even Churchill himself 1218 01:41:15,653 --> 01:41:18,656 which was a... a bit of a blow. 1219 01:41:19,115 --> 01:41:23,244 I really was upset about Churchill 1220 01:41:23,327 --> 01:41:26,497 the fact that he sort of turned his back on us 1221 01:41:27,164 --> 01:41:30,459 when we'd previously done such a good job for him. 1222 01:41:40,011 --> 01:41:43,639 John: After the war we just got used to not thinking about it 1223 01:41:43,723 --> 01:41:46,475 and never even talked about it. 1224 01:41:46,559 --> 01:41:47,560 Nobody asked us. 1225 01:41:47,977 --> 01:41:50,438 And so it went on, time went on. 1226 01:41:57,194 --> 01:41:58,946 Jack Watson: I'd been married 35 years 1227 01:41:59,030 --> 01:42:02,533 and it was only at our first reunion when we got together 1228 01:42:02,825 --> 01:42:04,035 and my wife said to me 1229 01:42:04,368 --> 01:42:07,705 "you never told me any of this. I didn't know this." 1230 01:42:08,706 --> 01:42:11,208 I said, "well, we haven't talked about it". 1231 01:42:11,292 --> 01:42:15,254 Nobody... bomber command, if you mention you was in bomber command 1232 01:42:15,338 --> 01:42:18,174 you were looked at as though you were a murderer. 1233 01:42:26,057 --> 01:42:29,018 Ron: We didn't realise that people wouldn't like us 1234 01:42:29,101 --> 01:42:30,728 after all we'd gone through. 1235 01:42:30,978 --> 01:42:32,480 We just couldn't understand it. 1236 01:42:33,022 --> 01:42:35,608 And I can remember one poor chap saying to me 1237 01:42:35,983 --> 01:42:37,485 "was it all in vain?" 1238 01:42:38,069 --> 01:42:41,322 And it wasn't until later on 1239 01:42:41,405 --> 01:42:43,783 when the bomber command memorial was built 1240 01:42:44,617 --> 01:42:47,995 that the public had a better understanding of what we'd done. 1241 01:42:55,461 --> 01:42:58,756 Benny: We worked hard doing all sorts of things 1242 01:42:58,839 --> 01:43:00,716 for ten years, I think it was 1243 01:43:00,800 --> 01:43:03,969 to get enough money to build that memorial. 1244 01:43:05,971 --> 01:43:09,975 It was built by us, not by the government, any government. 1245 01:43:11,852 --> 01:43:13,396 It's a wonderful memorial. 1246 01:43:28,786 --> 01:43:30,538 Bill gould: I was asked to do the reading 1247 01:43:30,621 --> 01:43:31,872 and that touched me. 1248 01:43:34,750 --> 01:43:35,918 It still does. 1249 01:43:41,841 --> 01:43:44,885 "As the father is tended towards his children 1250 01:43:44,969 --> 01:43:48,139 so was the lord tended to those that fear him 1251 01:43:48,889 --> 01:43:51,642 for he knows of what we are made. 1252 01:43:52,435 --> 01:43:55,229 He remembers that we are but dust. 1253 01:43:58,774 --> 01:44:00,735 We are but grass. 1254 01:44:03,154 --> 01:44:05,823 We flourish like a flower of the field. 1255 01:44:06,490 --> 01:44:09,618 When the wind goes over it, it is gone 1256 01:44:10,411 --> 01:44:13,581 and its place will know it no more. 1257 01:44:14,248 --> 01:44:19,587 But the merciful goodness of the lord endures forever and ever 1258 01:44:19,962 --> 01:44:22,465 amongst those that fear him." 1259 01:44:33,893 --> 01:44:36,312 Engine roars 1260 01:44:57,750 --> 01:45:00,628 Rusty: It's so different, Lancaster was so different. 1261 01:45:01,295 --> 01:45:04,298 It was always the best aeroplane you ever flew. 1262 01:45:07,676 --> 01:45:10,095 But when you finished your operational flying 1263 01:45:10,179 --> 01:45:14,934 you realised how bloody lucky you must have been to survive, you know? 1264 01:45:15,351 --> 01:45:17,603 When you think of all the friends that you've lost. 1265 01:45:18,687 --> 01:45:20,940 This affected you for the rest of your life. 1266 01:45:22,399 --> 01:45:25,986 At night now when I go to bed and tonight going to bed 1267 01:45:26,070 --> 01:45:27,613 talking about all this during the day 1268 01:45:27,696 --> 01:45:29,865 when I go to bed, put my head down on the pillow 1269 01:45:30,991 --> 01:45:34,119 I can see flak bursting, little red lights, flak bursting. 1270 01:45:34,203 --> 01:45:35,923 But it doesn't bother me, I know what it is. 1271 01:45:35,996 --> 01:45:41,293 It's alright, no problem whatsoever, but these memories are still there. 1272 01:45:51,929 --> 01:45:54,431 Engine roars 1273 01:46:05,568 --> 01:46:08,571 Music: "We are the heavy bombers" sung by the rushmore male voice choir 1274 01:46:08,654 --> 01:46:16,654 ♪ we are the heavy bombers ♪ 1275 01:46:16,871 --> 01:46:24,871 ♪ we try to do our bit ♪ 1276 01:46:25,838 --> 01:46:33,838 ♪ we fly through concentrations ♪ 1277 01:46:34,847 --> 01:46:42,847 ♪ of flak, we signed for it ♪ 1278 01:46:43,856 --> 01:46:51,856 ♪ and when we drop our cargoes ♪ 1279 01:46:52,865 --> 01:47:00,865 ♪ we do not give a damn ♪ 1280 01:47:01,749 --> 01:47:09,749 ♪ the eggs may miss the goods yard ♪ 1281 01:47:10,716 --> 01:47:18,716 ♪ but they muck up poor old hamm ♪ 1282 01:47:37,743 --> 01:47:45,743 ♪ And when in adverse weather ♪ 1283 01:47:46,335 --> 01:47:54,335 ♪ the winds are all to hell ♪ 1284 01:47:55,219 --> 01:48:03,219 ♪ the navigator's ballsed up ♪ 1285 01:48:04,061 --> 01:48:11,860 ♪ the wireless ballsed as well ♪ 1286 01:48:12,653 --> 01:48:20,653 ♪ we think of all the popsies ♪ 1287 01:48:21,662 --> 01:48:29,662 ♪ we've known in days gone by ♪ 1288 01:48:30,254 --> 01:48:38,254 ♪ and curse the silly effers ♪ 1289 01:48:39,346 --> 01:48:47,346 ♪ who taught us how to fly ♪ 103509

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.