
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, we explore the critical second week of September 1940, when the Battle of Britain reached a pivotal turning point that would ultimately determine the fate of Operation Sea Lion—Germany's planned invasion of Britain. Following the devastating bombing raids on London that began September 7th, German invasion preparations were paradoxically at their peak readiness while simultaneously becoming increasingly uncertain. As the Luftwaffe shifted focus from targeting RAF airfields to bombing London's civilian and industrial targets, Hitler repeatedly delayed his invasion decision, pushing the operation dangerously late into the season. Meanwhile, Fighter Command adapted brilliantly to the new German tactics, concentrating their forces more effectively and introducing coordinated squadron attacks that would prove devastatingly effective. We'll examine how weather, tactical missteps, and the growing exhaustion of both German and British pilots set the stage for the climactic confrontation of September 15th—later known as Battle of Britain Day—while exploring the human cost of this aerial campaign on both military personnel and London's civilian population.
Contact [email protected] to advertise on History of the Second World War.
History of the Second World War is part of the Airwave Media podcast network.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Wesley Livesay4.5
542542 ratings
In this episode, we explore the critical second week of September 1940, when the Battle of Britain reached a pivotal turning point that would ultimately determine the fate of Operation Sea Lion—Germany's planned invasion of Britain. Following the devastating bombing raids on London that began September 7th, German invasion preparations were paradoxically at their peak readiness while simultaneously becoming increasingly uncertain. As the Luftwaffe shifted focus from targeting RAF airfields to bombing London's civilian and industrial targets, Hitler repeatedly delayed his invasion decision, pushing the operation dangerously late into the season. Meanwhile, Fighter Command adapted brilliantly to the new German tactics, concentrating their forces more effectively and introducing coordinated squadron attacks that would prove devastatingly effective. We'll examine how weather, tactical missteps, and the growing exhaustion of both German and British pilots set the stage for the climactic confrontation of September 15th—later known as Battle of Britain Day—while exploring the human cost of this aerial campaign on both military personnel and London's civilian population.
Contact [email protected] to advertise on History of the Second World War.
History of the Second World War is part of the Airwave Media podcast network.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

3,974 Listeners

4,718 Listeners

1,834 Listeners

1,100 Listeners

1,850 Listeners

1,256 Listeners

1,140 Listeners

4,789 Listeners

1,523 Listeners

848 Listeners

1,408 Listeners

4,043 Listeners

447 Listeners

1,509 Listeners

664 Listeners

2,883 Listeners

1,006 Listeners

371 Listeners

1,421 Listeners

353 Listeners

528 Listeners

918 Listeners

318 Listeners

698 Listeners

1,562 Listeners

761 Listeners

114 Listeners

165 Listeners

93 Listeners

96 Listeners

112 Listeners