THE MEMORIAL
At about 03.40 on 3 June 1940 the
destroyer HMS Shikari sailed from
Dunkirk, bringing to an end the most
famous part of the evacuation of
British troops from France. Eleven
days later German troops paraded
through Paris. On 22 June the French
Government signed an armistice with
Germany.
Now Britain faced the possibility of a
Nazi invasion followed by all the
horrors of brutal occupation suffered
by many countries across Europe.
Led and inspired by the Prime Minister,
Winston Churchill, the people of Britain
prepared to fight for their freedom.
No modern invasion can succeed
unless the invading force has air
superiority. So it fell to just under
3000 men of Royal Air Force Fighter
Command to be at the forefront of
British resistance. To the Prime
Minister they were “The Few”; to
their leader, Air Chief Marshal
Dowding, they were “My Dear
Fighter Boys”. Well over 500 of them
died between 10 July and 31 October
1940 – the official dates of the Battle
and nearly 800 more did not live to
see the end of the war in 1945.
Today we honour them as men who
played the key role at a fulcrum of
British history.
In July and early August they fought mostly over the English Channel. The Germans designated 13 August, Adler Tag, “Eagle Day”, when Fighter Command would be eliminated. After this utter failure of the Luftwaffe, it was not long before enemy attacks were concentrated more and more on the fighter airfields, the radar stations and the aircraft factories. Some historians and participants in the Battle argue that by early September Fighter Command was close to breaking point, many of the experienced airmen had been killed or wounded. Those that were left were nearing exhaustion. Replacements were coming through and fighting heroically, but they were desperately inexperienced and under trained.
Then on 7 September, the Luftwaffe
changed its tactics and began bombing
London. On that Saturday night the
East End and the docks burned –
“Send every pump
you’ve got, the whole
bloody world’s on fire”
was the message from a London Fire
Brigade officer in the Surrey Docks.
For Londoners this was the start of
the blitz, with night after night of
bombing. For Fighter Command the
change provided a respite, because at
the time there was little that fighters
could do against German bombers at
night.
The last major daylight raid on London
took place on 15 September, now
commemorated as Battle of Britain
Day.
Thank you for your support.

