The Blitz was the sustained Nazi German bombing campaign against Britain during World War II and became one of the most famous home-front experiences of the war. The main Blitz lasted from September 7th, 1940, to May of 1941, and it was significant because it brought the war directly to civilians in London, England, and many other British cities while also showing that Germany could not force Britain out of the war through bombing alone.
BLITZ IN WORLD WAR II – BACKGROUND
By the summer of 1940, Nazi Germany had already defeated Poland, Denmark, Norway, the Low Countries, and France. This left Britain standing as Germany’s main enemy in western Europe. Since Britain was an island, Germany could not use the same fast land attacks (blitzkreig tactics) that had worked so well on the mainland of Europe. Instead, Adolf Hitler hoped that air power could weaken Britain, destroy morale, and prepare the way for a possible invasion called Operation Sea Lion.
The Blitz also grew out of the Battle of Britain. During that battle, the Luftwaffe, which was the German air force, tried to defeat the Royal Air Force, or RAF, and gain control of the skies. When that did not happen, Germany increasingly turned toward bombing London, England, and other cities. Therefore, the Blitz was not a separate event from the air war of 1940. It was the next stage of Germany’s attempt to knock Britain out of the war.
BLITZ IN WORLD WAR II – THE BLITZ BEGINS
The Blitz began on September 7th, 1940, when German bombers launched a major attack on London, England. That first day became known as Black Saturday. According to both Imperial War Museums and Britannica, the raid killed about 430 people and injured about 1,600 more. After that, London was bombed night after night, and Britannica states that the city was attacked on 57 straight nights. This was important because it turned bombing from an occasional fear into part of daily life for civilians.
Although London became the best-known target, the Blitz was much broader than London alone. Imperial War Museums notes that from mid-November of 1940 major provincial cities and industrial centres were increasingly targeted, and later attacks also focused on ports. Cities such as Coventry, England, Birmingham, England, Liverpool, England, Plymouth, England, Southampton, England, and Sheffield, England, were all hit. In this way, the Blitz became a national experience across much of Britain, not just a London story.
One of the most famous provincial raids was the attack on Coventry, England, on the night of November 14th, 1940. Wikipedia notes that the raid was especially devastating, heavily damaged factories and public utilities, and helped create the phrase “to coventrate,” meaning to destroy a city by bombing. This raid mattered because it showed how destructive concentrated bombing could be against an industrial city and helped make Coventry one of the best-known symbols of civilian suffering in wartime Britain.
BLITZ IN WORLD WAR II – LIFE DURING THE BLITZ
For civilians, the Blitz meant blackouts, air-raid sirens, shelters, fires, rubble, and constant uncertainty. Families had to decide whether to remain in their homes, use backyard Anderson shelters, or seek safety in public spaces. As bombing became more intense, many people in London, England, took refuge in Underground railway stations. At first officials resisted this, but both Britannica and Wikipedia describe how the government eventually accepted it and improved conditions with bunk beds, bathrooms, and other services. These shelters became one of the most memorable parts of civilian life during the Blitz.
Even under heavy bombing, everyday life did not completely stop. Many people still worked, shops reopened when they could, and emergency services tried to keep the city functioning. Britannica notes that London’s essential services were disrupted but never permanently broken. This is significant because one of Germany’s main goals was to break British morale, yet British cities kept operating even after severe raids. For high school students, this is one of the clearest examples of how the home front became part of the war effort.
The human cost was still enormous. Imperial War Museums states that over 43,500 civilians were killed during the nine months of the Blitz, while Wikipedia notes that more than 40,000 civilians were killed by Luftwaffe bombing during the war and that almost half of those deaths occurred in London. Large numbers of houses were damaged or destroyed, and many families were made homeless. Therefore, even though Britain remained in the war, the cost to ordinary people was very high.
BLITZ IN WORLD WAR II – WHY THE BLITZ FAILED
Germany hoped that bombing would force Britain to surrender or at least make invasion easier. However, the Blitz did not achieve that goal. Britannica explains that from a military perspective the campaign was counterproductive because Germany failed to win control of the skies, and by mid-September of 1940 the RAF had effectively won the Battle of Britain. Hitler then postponed Operation Sea Lion, and on May 11th, 1941, he called off the Blitz as his attention shifted east toward the Soviet Union.
This failure was important in the larger history of World War II. Britain remained a base for future Allied operations, and the war against Germany continued rather than ending in 1940. As such, the Blitz is often remembered not only for destruction, but also for the fact that Germany could not bomb Britain into submission. The campaign hurt cities and civilians badly, but it did not produce the political collapse Hitler wanted.
BLITZ IN WORLD WAR II – SIGNIFICANCE
The Blitz was significant because it showed how modern war could reach deep into civilian life. Bombing no longer affected only soldiers at the front. It also affected workers, children, families, transportation systems, churches, schools, and entire neighborhoods. In this sense, the Blitz helps students understand the idea of total war, in which whole societies become targets and participants in the conflict.
The Blitz was also significant because it became one of the defining experiences of Britain in World War II. It strengthened the image of British endurance, kept the United Kingdom in the war after the fall of France, and marked the failure of Germany’s attempt to force a quick victory in the west. Regardless of the heavy destruction it caused, the Blitz did not defeat Britain. Instead, it became one of the clearest examples of civilian resilience during the war.
