RMG3BXPF–WW2 - London under fire - bomb damage in King Street
RMM6PG38–Vintage 1940’s WW2 London Blitz image of bombed out London street with warden still using traditional British telephone box despite the significant damage.... ‘Keep calm and carry on...’
RMER405A–A Royal Observer Corps spotter scans the skies of London. Battle of Britain air observer keeping watch over London
RMB3P4A8–WW2 London Victory March Crowds at Trafalgar Square gather to celebrate the end of the war Nelsons Column
RMB3NG50–VJ DAY 15 August 1945 marked the surrender of Japan and crowds gathered in Trafalgar Square to celebrate the end of WW2
RFHMBC7C–Aircraft spotter on the roof of a building in London with St. Paul's Cathedral in the background.
RM2F8BH9H–British, WW2 London Transport poster, Please Pass along the Platform, 1942-1945
RMMGJDAA–1950s, historical, family visiting a quiet Trafalgar Square, London, England, UK.
RMWHA22H–WW2: London during the war, with fires near St Paul's Cathedral.
RMM8TEE3–WW2 London Transport helmet used on London buses during the Blitz and also by underground shelter staff
RMCMRT0N–1930s 1940s MEN WEARING LARGE ASBESTOS GLOVES MADE IN NEW JERSEY USA FACTORY FOR WW2 LONDON FIRE FIGHTERS
RM2JD6JXM–WW2 - British Home front, October 1941 - Mrs John Steel, daughter of Sir Bernard Spilsbury, British Pathologist, lends her hand to the war effort. A member of the London Auxiliary Ambulance Service (L.A.A.S.) as a Driver, she is seen here on the land of a Hospital Farm in Essex (where she is stationed), helping to dig potatoes. Colourised version of: 10998604 Date: 1941
RME7D969–WW2 Bomb Damage - Temple Church London in June 1945
RM2ARPCYN–WW2 veteran Mervyn Kerch, 95, who was involved in the D-Day Landings, speaks to pupils at Sandhurst Primary School in south east London, to raise awareness of the 75th anniversaries of VE and VJ day later this year.
RM2AMCP5N–The Battle of Britain Monument memorial sculpture on the Victoria Embankment in Westminster, London, England, UK
RF2A865T3–London EC2Y EC1A Barbican pre-WW2 bomb damage. Jewin Street GOAD 1929 old map
RM2HJCNPN–Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament through barbed war, London, World War 2.
RMGNPMRX–London, England, UK. 'The Women of World War II' memorial in Whitehall. (2005, John Mills)
RFKWP3EJ–vintage photo of a child amidst the ruins of London during WW2
RMHH4F26–WW2 - London Under Fire. View down Ludgate Hill showing bomb damaged buildings.
RM2DGB2X3–LONDON BLITZ WW2 SAINT PAULS CATHEDRAL NAZI GERMANY BOMBING St Paul's Survives. An iconic photograph of Saint Pauls Cathedral pre-planned and bravely taken in a night air raid 29/30th December 1940 by photographer Herbert Mason. This image became the symbol of resistance against the Nazi Germany Luftwaffe terror bombing of civilians. This photograph has been carefully restored and enhanced to re-create its original impact and quality.
RFRW3M4B–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMEMWKXD–London in Ruins, World War Two, Circa August 1941. Old Bailey Law Courts in background.
RMB3NE3B–TRAFALGAR SQUARE London in 1942 with army recruiting poster
RFPWPYT7–Bomber Command war memorial Green Park London
RM2F5D36E–British, WW2, London Transport poster: Linking Home and Factory, Turning the Wheels of War, 1942-1945
RMDGNARH–1950s, historical, post WW2 bomb damaged buildings, Central London, England, UK, with billboards. Advertisements for Brtiish Sunday newspaper, the News of the World and American airline company, TWA can be seen displayed.
RMWHA203–WW2: London AFS. Auxilary Firemen (l-r), Bernard Hailstone, Leonard Rosoman and Richard Southern.
RM2M0BYXN–Members of the Home Guard repairing bomb damage in London 1943
RMM8TEF6–WW2 British War Department Watkin Clinometer made by Pitkin Ltd of London in 1944 and marked No 679
RM2RAAH8C–Bomb damage at the Leysian Mission building during WW2. London
RF2DD9J4J–Peterhouse Hostel, Peterhouse College, University of Cambridge. The hostel housed the London School of Economics 1939-45. The Hostel Peterhouse.
RM2ARPD6M–WW2 veteran Neil Flanigan, 96, who was born in Jamaica and travelled to England to join the Royal Air Force in 1943, speaks to pupils at Sandhurst Primary School in south east London, to raise awareness of the 75th anniversaries of VE and VJ day later this year.
RFRDAM00–World War Two Shrapnel Damage On An Exterior Wall In London
RM2GW1E6B–Crowds fill the streets of London on VE Day (Victory in Europe Day), the 8th May 1945
RM2HJCP3E–Troops arriving at a London railway station while children evacuate to the countryside during The Blitz, World War 2, 1940.
RME7D96A–WW2 Bomb Damage - Church of St John's Cripplegate London in August 1946
RMEXRAHM–1940s UK Blackout Poster
RMHH4F23–WW2 - London Under Fire. St Paul's Cathedral seen from Paternoster Row - extensive bomb damage.
RM2BFET79–London Blitz 1940s WW2 Archive image of London Bus en-route to Kings Cross in bomb crater caused by terror bombing by the Nazi Germany Luftwaffe airforce
RFRW3M54–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMEJXYX3–The aftermath of V2 explosion. On the 8th September 1944 a huge explosion occured in Staveley Road, Chiswick, West London. There had been no siren, no warning and no V1 flying bombs had been sighted. The explosion was caused by the first V2 ballistic missile fired in anger. Hitler's much vaunted A4 Rocket more commonly known as the V2 weighed 13 tons and had arrived via the stratosphere at 3,000 miles an hour faster than the speed of sound. This meant that the first anybody knew about the attack was the explosion followed by the roar of the rocket motors catching up
RMBADTRG–THEY ALSO SERVE 1942 London Transport advert designed by Fred Taylor
RFPWPYN7–Bomber Command war memorial Green Park London
RM2F8BH18–British, WW2 London Transport poster, Please Stand on the Right of The Escalator, 1942-1945
RMDJ1WA5–1950s, Historical picture of the exterior of St Paul's Cathedral, London and showing an area of rough ground from WW2 bomb damage next to it. The seat of the Bishop of London, it was designed by Sir Christopher Wren.
RMWHA21X–WW2: London/ A section of the huge crowds of civilians and allied servicemen and women gathered in Piccadilly Circus awaiting the final announcement of Germany's total surrender. 7th June 1945.
RMW8EBB1–Soldiers and prisoners of war clearing bomb damage from the Haberdashers Hall in London following a German air raid in 1940
RMB7FYKB–Clapham North Deep-Level WW2 air raid shelter London
RM2RFG60N–LONDON, ENGLAND, UK - August 1939 - Anti-aircraft guns in Hyde Park go into action as 'enemy bombers' make a daylight raid on London, during giant air
RMDCFA3R–Bomber Command memorial to the heroic sacrifice of air crews during WW2, London
RM2RAAM4X–Bomb damage in Sidney Street, East London, WW2. Both sides of the entire street were shattered by two bombs. Date: 1940
RFT82T2T–A Painted Sign From World War 2 Indicating The Whereabouts Of An Air Raid Shelter On The Wall Of A Building In London
RM2GW1DTK–Crowds fill the streets of London on VE Day (Victory in Europe Day), the 8th May 1945
RM2HJCNNK–Children in an eastern suburb of London whose home was destroyed in The Blitz, September 1940. The Blitz was a German bombing campaign against the United Kingdom in 1940 and 1941, during the Second World War. The term comes from Blitzkrieg, meaning 'lightning war' in German.
RME7D96C–WW2 Bomb Damage - Church of St Vedast Foster Lane London in July 1946
RMEXRHEK–1940s UK Ministry of Health Poster
RMHH4G1H–WW2 - London under fire - Moorfields
RMP534YA–1940 London Firemen WW2 Blitz Bombing City Centre brave courageous British Fireman Firemen Firefighters with hose fighting fires and damping down after a Nazi Germany terror bombing raid. Central London City buildings in ruins with danger of imminent collapse London UK
RFRW3M4C–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMEM836X–WW2 Air Raid Damage 1943 Bombed fire station at Tooting in London.
RM2TC3K70–LONDON BOMB DAMAGE January 1941. View eastwards from St. Paul's Cathedral
RFPWPYT2–Bomber Command war memorial Green Park London
RM2F8BH0Y–British, WW2 London Transport poster, Please Let Passengers off the Car (Train) First, 1942-1945
RM2BPFGY6–1942, 'Welcome Home'....on a wet, damp day at London docks, a lady giving an injured solider a cigarette as he is carried on a metal stretcher by two uniformed me off an ambulance ship, an old steamer or ferry, at the quayside, England, during WW2.
RMWHA25Y–WW2: ARP Poster/ London Volunteer Ambulance service poster for recruiting.
RME9KYGK–TOWER HILL MEMORIAL to the dead of WW2, London UK
RMM71TET–Historic WW2 battleship HMS Belfast, moored in the River Thames, London, England.
RM2H71CAN–LONDON, ENGLAND, UK - 07 September 1940 - View along the River Thames in London towards smoke rising from the London docks after an air raid during th
RMDCFA5W–Bomber Command memorial to the heroic sacrifice of air crews during WW2, London
RM2JD6JX5–WW2 - 'Where's George?' - Bomb Damage in London - Coats and Hats left on hooks while the floor has disappeared. Colourised version of: 11007656 Date: 1940
RMD7M84E–Memorial to the officers and men of the British Navy who lost their lives serving in Submarines during WW1 and WW2, London.
RM2GT0C7G–A bus is left leaning against the side of a building in Harrington Square, Mornington Crescent,after an air raid on London in the first days of the Blitz, 9th September 1940.
RM2HJCNHX–The first mass air raid on London on 7th September, 1940, showing Tower Bridge and smoke from fires. The Blitz was a German bombing campaign against the United Kingdom in 1940 and 1941, during the Second World War. The term comes from Blitzkrieg, meaning 'lightning war' in German.
RF2A865P4–London EC4Y EC4V Blackfriars Queen Victoria Street WW2 Bomb damage GOAD 1941 map
RMPX7C8D–Young boy reading Comic Cuts magazine while waiting for transport for evacuation during World War Two in London 1941 part of Operation Pied Piper
RMHH4G1F–WW2 - London under fire - London Wall
RM2J001X3–WW2 London Blitz Recruitment Poster appealing for Firemen to combat The London Blitz by Nazi Germany bombing raids London County Council ARP, Auxiliary Fire Service, Great Britain, c. 1941, F. Bernard Clark
RFRW3M4A–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMB3P45K–WW2 Air Raid Damage on a London street after a German bombing raid the night before
RMCCATPA–GENERAL CHARLES DE GAULLE with Free French officers in London in 1941
RFPWPYT8–Bomber Command war memorial Green Park London
RM2F8BH5X–British, WW2 London Transport bus poster, Steering London, Through Daylight & Blackout, Faithfully, 1942-1945
RMM6DTD5–1950s, historical, London, England, two businessmen wearing bowler hats walk down some steps in the city.
RMWH9YRF–WW2: A gas proof shelter built in a London garden.
RME9KYGP–TOWER HILL MEMORIAL to the dead of WW2, London UK
RMWTD3P4–King George of Greece. Like the sovereigns of most occupied countries. the King of the Hellenes fled to London after the fall of Greece.
RMR19RE2–London, UK. 10th Nov, 2018. A black & white picture amongst the lines of poppy crosses at the Westminster Abbey Field of Remembrance. Chief Petty Officer George Horton (pictured) was one of the 1,415 men lost when HMS Hood was sunk in the Denmark Strait on 24th May 1941 during WW2. Credit: David Rowe/Alamy Live News
RMDCFA28–Bomber Command memorial to the heroic sacrifice of air crews during WW2, London
RM2HJYCKX–LONDON - JUNE 30: On 30 June 1944, Aldwych WC2 suffered one of the deadliest V1 flying bomb attacks of the war. A fortnight after the first V1 strikes on London, the menacing drone of yet another ‘Doodlebug’ was heard over the capital. Aldwych was crowded with workers returning from their lunch hour or queuing at the local Post Office. At 2.07pm the V1 glided silently in over the Thames, diving down to explode on the road between the Air Ministry and the north east wing of Bush House, home to the BBC External Services. Although the steel-framed Air Ministry absorbed much of the explosion, leav
RMMM0E9W–London 9th May 2018 A participant in the 'Immortal Regiment' march in London commemorating the Russian fallen of the second world war. Credit Ian Davidson/Alamy Live News
RM2GT0BNF–A young woman plays a gramophone in an air raid shelter in north London during 1940. A young woman places the gramophone needle on a record to bring some light relief to an air raid shelter, somewhere in north London. The rest of the shelterers appear to be enjoying her choice of music. In the background, one woman can be seen knitting, as others chat to pass the time.
RM2HJCN4H–Firemen at work in a bomb-damaged street in London after a Saturday night Blitz raid, circa 1941. The Blitz was a German bombing campaign against the United Kingdom in 1940 and 1941, during the Second World War. The term comes from Blitzkrieg, meaning 'lightning war' in German.
RM2CGCTAN–WW2 era photograph portrait of Red Cross Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD nurse, Southfields, Putney, Wandsworth, London, U.K.
RMG3CXMT–WW2 - London Auxiliary Ambulance Service Driver on the farm
RM2RWD0X0–WW2 London Blitz Britain's Home Front 1939 - 1945- Roof Spotters Journalist roof spotters scanning the horizon for Nazi Gemany Bomber Aircraft through binoculars on the roof of a Fleet Street newspaper office during an air raid warning in London. Date between 1939 and 1945
RFRW3M56–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMB3P44B–WW2 Air Raid Damage Bomb damage in London People survey the damaged buildings destroyed by the air raid bombs
RM2TC3K6M–LONDON BOMB DAMAGE January 1941. View north west from St Paul's Cathedral with the Old Bailey top left
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