1940s

1930s, 1940s, After 1950, Books, Periodicals, Space, Videos

Great minds

Anthony Eden at a United Nations Association rally at the Albert Hall, 1 March 1947: Mr. EDEN and M. JAN MASARYK, Czechoslovak Foreign Minister, were the other principal speakers. Of international affairs, Mr. EDEN said: “Our planet has become very small. We are nearer to San Francisco to-day than we were to Paris 100 years

1920s, 1940s, Aircraft, Books

We? Wha?

This is odd: To my readers, then, let me explain again that a pursuit plane should not carry out any pursuing. It should be a machine designed for fighting. It should have the qualities of fast climb, reasonable manœuvrability and gun-power. It should be simple in design and cheap to produce, because it will take

1930s, 1940s, Australia

The ashes of the air

I’ve written about connections between sport and war before. Here’s another which I came across just last night, so perfectly timed that I can’t resist posting it. It’s from a book written in October 1941 or so by the pseudonymous Auspex, who is talking here about the RAF’s sweeps over France that summer, which he

1940s, Australia, Books, Other, Pictures

Now pay attention

This sticker is in the back of a book published in 1940, originally part of the collection of the Public Lending Library of Victoria (itself a part of the Public Library of Victoria, as the SLV was then known). I was struck particularly by no. 4. Were books considered possible vectors for infectious disease —

1940s, Books

Pop quiz, rotter!

DO YOU KNOW — Whether you can be gassed by bombs dropped from airplanes? The real strength of Germany’s Air Force? What sort of an air force Mussolini has? Why bombers cannot win the present war? What the Suicide Club of the war will be in history? Why there will be few romantic Aces in

1920s, 1930s, 1940s, Air control

Me on Orac on Dawkins on Harris

I’ve been reading Respectful Insolence for quite a while now, but I somehow missed Orac’s post critiquing Richard Dawkins’ comments on Arthur Harris and the bombing of civilians in the Second World War, and how the development of precision-guided munitions (“smart bombs”) reflects a change in the moral zeitgeist since then. Fortunately, Jonathan Dresner pointed

1930s, 1940s

Pick a date, any date

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] In a comment to an earlier post, Jonathan Dresner quite legitimately took exception to my use of the term ‘interwar’ to refer to the period 1919-1939: From an Asian history perspective, the Japanese use of chemical weapons in China isn’t really “interwar,” as major combat operations began in late ’37

1940s, Pictures

Trouble at Millwall

Note: the photograph turned out to be real after all. See here. In a comment to an earlier post, Alan pointed out that it has been claimed that the photo I used was a propaganda fake. As I have previously discussed the subject of fake combat photos, I was appropriately mortified at the thought of

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