It’s that quote again — V
So, to conclude my survey of the career of Stanley Baldwin’s phrase ‘the bomber will always get through’ in the British press (or at least in the British Newspaper Archive), here’s how it fared during the Second World War.
So, to conclude my survey of the career of Stanley Baldwin’s phrase ‘the bomber will always get through’ in the British press (or at least in the British Newspaper Archive), here’s how it fared during the Second World War.
I showed in an earlier post that scepticism of Baldwin’s dictum that ‘the bomber will always get through’ begins to appear in the British Newspaper Archive (BNA) in 1937, if only in a very small way. In 1938, the majority opinion still takes it to be axiomatic. For example, town alderman W. A. Miller, attacked
Today, a Trove API upgrade, or to be more precise, the decomissioning of the old API, briefly broke Trove Air Bot (and all the other Trove bots). Fortunately Tim Sherratt worked out a solution, and Trove Air Bot is now back in action with all new code, which (with slightly more useful comments) can be
After the drama of 1934, ‘the bomber will always get through’ appears less frequently in the British Newspaper Archive (BNA) in 1935 (though still at about twice the level than in 1932 or 1933). But it is still mostly being used in a very political way. This is not surprising, with the general election contested
Stanley Baldwin’s ‘the bomber will always get through’ speech was not widely quoted in the British press in the 1930s. But when it was quoted, how was it used? To determine this, I’m going to do a closer read through of the British Newspaper Archive (BNA).
My article, ‘The meaning of Hendon: the Royal Air Force Display, aerial theatre and the technological sublime, 1920–37’, has been accepted for publication in Historical Research (the journal of the Institute of Historical Research). I’m not sure when it will be published yet, and I can’t self-archive the post-peer-reviewed version until 24 months after publication.
The man: Stanley Baldwin. The place: the House of Commons. The date: 10 November 1932. The quote: I think it is well also for the man in the street to realize that there is no power on earth that can protect him from being bombed, whatever people may tell him. The bomber will always get
Swastika Night was written by Katharine Burdekin under the pseudonym Murray Constantine. It’s a dystopian novel in which Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan have conquered the world and divided it between them. Nothing so original in that, you might think — except that Swastika Night was published in June 1937, before the invasion of Poland
From the climactic set-piece at the 1927 RAF Display at Hendon, the destruction of an ‘Eastern village’ by Fairey Foxes — in GIF form:
Walter Sickert, Miss Earhart’s Arrival (1932). A fascinating image. The occasion is Amelia Earhart’s arrival at Hanworth aerodrome on 22 May 1932, after her solo flight across the Atlantic, the first by a woman and in record time. She was already well-known as an aviator, but this feat made her a celebrity. You can see