RME7D969–WW2 Bomb Damage - Temple Church London in June 1945
RMG64P2H–South London carries on.. South London carries on after bomb damage.
RMB3P59B–Bomb damaged London during WW2
RMG3ARKY–Blitz in London -- aftermath of bombing, with a row of ruined buildings, and a route 88 bus for Acton Green in a large crater in the road. Date: 1940s
RM2PYXKTP–WW2 The London Blitz with a London bus in a bomb crater after a terror bombing blitz by Nazi Germany. The aftermath of a bombing raid, a bus lies in a crater in Balham, South London. Air Raid Damage in Britain during the Second World War. World War II
RMG3CYX8–WW2 - Bomb Damage in London - Coats and Hats left on hooks
RMEM82JX–London Blitz Bomb Damage 1940 WW2 Smoke rises from behind the dome of St Pauls Cathedral after the first daylight bombing raid by the Luftwaffe (German Airforce) on the docks and the East End of London in September 1940.
RMW8EBB1–Soldiers and prisoners of war clearing bomb damage from the Haberdashers Hall in London following a German air raid in 1940
RMB3P59D–Bomb damage Mount Pleasant London during WW2
RME7D96A–WW2 Bomb Damage - Church of St John's Cripplegate London in August 1946
RMEMWPD9–Bomb damage to the London Hospital. 9th April 1941
RMDRHHWX–Bomb damage at the Leysian Mission building during WW2
RFRW3M5A–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
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
RMMHMNFF–Duke Street, London, under fire during the Blitz, WW2
RM2M0BYXN–Members of the Home Guard repairing bomb damage in London 1943
RM2T7KX1C–Members of the Pioneer Corps clearing rubble and damage to London streets following Luftwaffe air raids during the Second World War in January 1941.
RMDRATN0–Damaged London Hospital - The Blitz
RMG5G604–St. Paul's Cathedral stands out clearly against the skyline now that demolition men have cleared away bombed buildings in the vicinity.
RM2DE0PG8–UK, London, Docklands, Isle of Dogs, early 1974. Prince Alfred public house or pub, ('The Bucket') 22 Tobago Street. Manilla St (on right). Closed after WW2 bomb damage and still standing as a ruin in 1974.
RM2GX7A4Y–Winston Churchil inspecting bomb damage in London during the Blitz in 1940
RM2M3NR0H–Bomb damage in the North Transept of St Paul's catherdral, London, hit by a heavy bombing raid in April 1941 during the Blitz. Date: 1941
RM2E3C8FM–UK, West London, Notting Hill, 1973. Rundown & dilapidated large four-story houses are starting to be restored and redecorated. Near No:2 Powis Gardens. To the right are the garages of Powis Court, below the balconies, entrance in Powis Square.
RMG3ARKK–Blitz in London -- bombing near the Monument in the City. Date: circa 1940
RMGAC2DX–King George VI, the Queen and Princess Elizabeth visiting Stepney in the East end of London during the Second World War.
RMHT3BHE–A scene during the London blitz, c1940 (1942). Artist: Unknown.
RM2EAARP9–UK, West London, Notting Hill, 1973. Rundown & dilapidated large four-story houses are starting to be restored and redecorated. Near No:2 Powis Gardens. To the right are the garages of Powis Court, below the balconies, entrance in Powis Square.
RMG4M33D–Second World War/Bomb damage
RME7D96C–WW2 Bomb Damage - Church of St Vedast Foster Lane London in July 1946
RMEMWNBC–Bomb damage to the London Hospital. 9th April 1941
RMTRMK93–Bomb damage, Temple Church, London, June 1945
RMHGF9DY–Churchill inspecting bomb damage in the City of London. September 1940.
RMEMWGMP–Bomb damage in Kentish Town, London. 19th June 1944.
RMTRMK95–Bomb damage, St Giles Church, Cripplegate, London, August 1946
RMEMWJC6–Bomb damage at Invicta Road, East Greenwich, London during the Second World War. 14th November 1940.
RM2H2HDXX–St Giles' Cripplegate, Fore Street, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking south-east across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Giles' Cripplegate Church. St Giles' Church was badly damaged during the Blitz in 1941 and the immediate area around it was almost completely destroyed by bombing. The church was rebuilt in the 1950s and now stands at the centre of the Barbican Estate.
RMEM836X–WW2 Air Raid Damage 1943 Bombed fire station at Tooting in London.
RMT95C0D–World War Two air raid casualty rescued from bombed buidling during the Blitz of Britain September 1940
RM2GX7A4T–Bomb damage inside Westminster Abbey during the Londin Blitz
RMHT2074–'The Cloisters in the Temple after having been wrecked by fire', 1941. Artist: Unknown.
RM2RBTC69–London, England: c. 1943 Civil Defense rescue workers searching the ruins for victims and survivors after a German V-1 flying bomb hit London's Balham district.
RMG3ARME–Blitz in London -- aftermath of bombing, City Road and Old Street. Date: 1940s
RMMPW2T9–Church of St Giles without Cripplegate, London, 1959. Artist: Aerofilms.
RMMHMNEY–Duke Street, London, under fire during the Blitz, Second World War. Date: 1940s
RMG4EBW3–PA NEWS PHOTO NOVEMBER 1944 SCENE OF DEVASTATION AFTER A GERMAN V2 ROCKET FELL ON WOOLWORTHS AND OTHER STORES IN NEW CROSS, LONDON KILLING 160 PEOPLE AND SERIOUSLY INJURING 108 OTHERS
RMG3ARM8–Blitz in London -- aftermath of bombing, with men clearing up around a shattered bus. Date: 1940s
RM2T1KXMA–Bomb Damage in London, England, January 1942 A view of St Paul's Cathedral through bomb damage and snow.
RM2H2HEE3–St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking north-west across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Paul's Cathedral with St Nicholas Cole Abbey on the left of the foreground. St Nicholas Cole Abbey was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. During the Second World War it was again badly damaged by bombing and lay in ruins until it was restored in 1962.
RMKEE7NB–Oxford Circus, London c1942. Life going on as normal despite the effects of a bombing during World War 2, people going about their daily business as going to school or work, with buses and taxi cabs on the road alongside lorries and vans. Photograph by Tony Henshaw - From the wholly-owned original negative.
RFRW3M4B–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMTRMK96–Bomb damage, St Vedast Church, Foster Lane, London, July 1946
RMB4K7HA–Bomb damage caused during air raids on North London in WW2
RMT95C0E–World War Two air raid casualty rescued from bombed buidling during the Blitz of Britain September 1940
RMW7EKC1–'Two of the effigies of the Knights in the round of the Temple Church, gutted by fire, 1941'. Artist: Unknown.
RM2GX7A5D–Bomb damage inside Westminster Abbey during the Londin Blitz
RMW7F32A–'In the morning, work as usual. After a big raid, the way to the office is knee-deep in rubble. Lond Artist: Unknown.
RMW7EY2K–'Firemen Tackle City Blaze', 1940, (1940). Artist: Unknown.
RMG3ARKP–Blitz in London -- aftermath of bombing, with some people sorting through the rubble and others stopping for a refreshment break. Date: 1940s
RM2T1KKD6–Flying Bomb- V1 Bomb Damage in London, England, UK, 1944 A woman of the American Ambulance Great Britain receives a telephone call requesting their attendance at an incident.
RM2M96RM4–The bomb damaged main stands at Upton Park (the Boleyn Ground), the home of West Ham United Football Club following bombing raids during the blitz on London in World War Two.
RM2H2HEET–St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view from the north-east showing the dome of St Paul's Cathedral through a gap between buildings, with the top of the tower of St Alban's Church on Wood Street behind a bomb damaged building in the foreground. St Alban's Church was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. During the Second World War it was destroyed by bombing with only the tower surviving.
RFRW3M54–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RM2M3NN4J–Residents from the bomb damaged street, peer through a huge whole in their house, viewing the utter destruction caused by Goering's men, and salvaging clothes and blankets from the ruins. Date: September 1940
RME7D96D–WW2 bomb damage st anne and st agnes Gresham Street London July 1946
RMDRATNC–Fire brigade clear debris
RMB4K7HB–Damage to the House of Commons during bombing of London in WW2
RM2GX7A2F–King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (the Queen Mother) looking at the damage to Buckingham Palace during the London Blitz in 1940
RMW7F32G–A scene during the London blitz, c1940 (1942). Artist: Unknown.
RM2T1KEE4–Bomb Damage in London, England, April 1945 Aerial view of the City of London around St Paul's Cathedral from the south-east in which the extent of bomb damage is clearly visible.
RM2H2HFHX–St Giles' Cripplegate, Fore Street, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking north-west across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Giles' Cripplegate Church in the distance with St Mary Aldermanbury on the right of the foreground. St Mary Aldermanbury which was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666 was later gutted by fire during the Blitz in 1940. The remains of the walls were removed and rebuilt in Fulton, Missouri in 1966 as a memorial to Winston Churchill, although the footings of the church remain on the origin
RFRW3M4C–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMDRATN3–Combing the wreckage of a bombed house
RMB3P5H9–WW2 Bomb Damage in West Ham East london
RMDRHHX1–Children celebrate victory day in Europe
RM2GX7A2J–King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (the Queen Mother) looking at the damage to Buckingham Palace during the London Blitz in 1940
RM2GT0BND–Aldwych tube station being used as a bomb shelter in 1940
RM2GX7A26–Firemen sparaying water on burning buildings during the London Blitz
RM2T1KKGC–Flying Bomb- V1 Bomb Damage in London, England, UK, 1944 Three dogs sit in a row at a Mechanised Transport Corps post, somewhere in London.
RM2H2HDD4–St Mary-le-Bow Church, Cheapside, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking north-east across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Mary-le-Bow Church. St Mary-le-Bow was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. During the Second World War it was almost destroyed by bombing on 10th May 1941 with incendiary bombs causing a fire which sent the bells in its tower crashing down to the ground. The tower was left standing and restoration of the church began in 1956.
RFRW3M4A–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
RM2GX7A29–Firemen sparaying water on burning buildings during the London Blitz
RM2T1KKE5–Flying Bomb- V1 Bomb Damage in London, England, UK, 1944 Women of the American Ambulance Great Britain wash an ambulance car of the surgical unit to pass the time between call-outs at their depot, somewhere in London.
RM2H2HDM6–St Mary-le-Bow Church, Cheapside, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking east across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Mary-le-Bow Church. St Mary-le-Bow was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. During the Second World War it was almost destroyed by bombing on 10th May 1941 with incendiary bombs causing a fire which sent the bells in its tower crashing down to the ground. The tower was left standing and restoration of the church began in 1956.
RFRW3M56–Winston Churchill inspects bomb damage in the City of London. 1940
RMB3P455–WW2 Air Raid Damage April 1941 Bomb damage in London view of the wreckage and rubble left after the air raid bombs
RM2GX7A2B–Firemen sparaying water on burning buildings during the London Blitz
RM2T1KXN2–Bombs Hit London Stores- Air Raid Damage in London, England, 1940 A wide view of the bomb-damaged shell of the John Lewis department store on London's Oxford Street, following an air raid in September 1940.
RM2H2HE1K–St Mary-le-Bow Church, Cheapside, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941 - 1945. A view looking south-east across a bomb damaged landscape towards St Mary-le-Bow Church, with a corner of Goldsmiths Hall just visible on the right. St Mary-le-Bow was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. During the Second World War it was almost destroyed by bombing on 10th May 1941 with incendiary bombs causing a fire which sent the bells in its tower crashing down to the ground. The tower was left standing and restoration of the church began in 1956.
RFWEECYF–Winston Churchill with his wife Clementine visit the bomb damage in London.30th December 1940
RMB3P44A–WW2 Air Raid Damage April 1941 Bomb damage in London People clear the streets walking around rubble and debris left by the air
RM2GX7A64–A business owner writing humourous messages on his shop to convey Business As Usual during teh London Blitz.
RM2T1KKDF–Flying Bomb- V1 Bomb Damage in London, England, UK, 1944 Before they leave the depot to attend an incident, women of the American Ambulance Great Britain look at a map to plan their route. A telephone call has just been received to say that several of their ambulances are needed.
RM2H2HDR8–St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking south-west across a bomb damaged landscape towards the Church of St Verdast-alias-Foster with St Paul's Cathedral beyond. The Church of St Verdast-alias-Foster was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. In the Second World War it was gutted by fire during the Blitz in 1940-41 and was later rebuilt after the war with work starting in 1953. St Paul's Cathedral survived the bombing raids but other buildings in the area w
RFWEECNN–Winston Churchill with his wife Clementine inspect bomb damage from a launch on the Thames. 25th September 1940
RMB3P5A4–Bomb damage in London during WW2
RM2GX7A5M–A London milkman delivering milk to homes, walking acrossa rubble filled street, showing Business As Usual
RM2T1KKF1–Flying Bomb- V1 Bomb Damage in London, England, UK, 1944 A police officer has his hand bandaged by women of the American Ambulance Great Britain following a V1 attack in Upper Norwood. The original caption states that the policeman's hand was injured by flying glass.
RM2H2HDP9–St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Churchyard, City of London, City and County of the City of London, Greater London Authority, 1941-1945. A view looking south-west across a bomb damaged landscape towards the Church of St Vedast-alias-Foster with St Paul's Cathedral beyond. The Church of St Vedast-alias-Foster was rebuilt by Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London in 1666. In the Second World War it was gutted by fire during the Blitz in 1940-41 and was later rebuilt after the war with work starting in 1953. St Paul's Cathedral survived the bombing raids but other buildings in the area wer
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