The Military Training Act, Britain's first peacetime draft, comes into force. All men aged 20–21 are now liable to call-up for four years military service as 'Militiamen'.
24 August 1939
Given the worsening situation in Europe, Parliament is recalled and immediately enacts the Emergency Powers (Defence) Act 1939, granting the government special legislative powers for the duration of the crisis.
The National Defence Companies (a voluntary reserve force of former servicemen) are mobilised to protect "vulnerable points".[2]
30 August 1939
The Fleet proceeds to its war stations. The Royal Navy is much stronger than Germany's Kriegsmarine. It has twelve battleships versus zero for Germany; seven aircraft carriers versus zero; three battle cruisers versus five; 66 cruisers versus six; 100 destroyers versus 17, 67 submarines versus 57; and a merchant fleet five times larger.[3]
1 September 1939
In response to the German invasion of Poland and the prospect of war with Germany, plans for the evacuation of children and nursing and expectant mothers from London and other areas deemed vulnerable to German air attack are put into action.
Government initiates 'Operation Pied Piper' which would see the evacuation of over 1.5 million people from urban 'target' areas, of whom 800,000 were children.
2 September 1939
Under intense criticism from the House, Neville Chamberlain abandons an offer to negotiate peace terms between Germany and Poland and agrees to present an ultimatum to Hitler.
3 September 1939
Shortly after 11:00 Chamberlain announces to the nation that his ultimatum has expired and that Britain is at war with Germany.
Twenty minutes later the first air raid sirens are sounded in London. They are a false alarm.
The first war tax is revealed by the Cabinet, including a significant increase in income taxes.
1 October 1939
Call-Up Proclamation: all men aged 20–21 who have not already done so must apply for registration with the military authorities.
6 October 1939
With the end of formal Polish resistance the Phoney War begins; It lasts until April 1940. There was little military action, although the Allies (Britain and France) began economic warfare, and shut down the German surface raiders. They created elaborate plans for numerous large-scale operations designed to swiftly and decisively cripple the German war effort. These included opening a French-British front in the Balkans; invading Norway to seize control of the Germany's main source of iron ore; and a strike against the Soviet Union, to cut off its supply of oil to Germany. Only the Norway plan came to fruition, and it was too little too late in April 1940.[5]
November 1939
London schools start to reopen because of evacuee children returning to the capital.[6]
1940
January 1940
35% of London schoolchildren had returned from evacuation.[6]
Internment of all German or Austrian males aged between 16 and 60 begins, starting with those living nearest to the south and east coasts.[9]
14 May 1940
In a BBC radio broadcast Anthony Eden calls for the creation of the Local Defence Volunteers (LDV) militia – renamed on 23 July the Home Guard.
22 May 1940
The Emergency Powers (Defence) Act 1940 is passed, granting the government even more authority to control persons and property for the duration of the war.[10]
10 June 1940
Italy declares war on Britain.
Italian men aged 17 to 60 are arrested and interned.
Large mobs attack Italian businesses and families in London, Liverpool, Belfast, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Glasgow.[11]
Introduction of Defence Regulation 58AA allowing the Minister of Labour to ban strike action and force compulsory arbitration. No strikes are called by any trade union during the war; there are unofficial short local strikes in coal, shipbuilding and machinery.[12]
The German Blitz hits London and other major cities causing death and damage. Official histories concluded that the mental health of a nation may have improved, while panic was a rarity. Prewar dire predictions of mass air-raid neurosis were not borne out. Predictions had underestimated the adaptability and resourcefulness; in addition there were many new civil defense roles that gave a sense of fighting back rather than despair.[14] The highly visible dangerous role gave firemen some of the ideal attributes more commonly associated with the venerated image of the military hero.[15]
7 September 1940
German bombing raid on South London; formal beginning of London Blitz.
The Communist Daily Worker newspaper is banned. It had ignored a July 1940 warning that its pacifist line contravened Defence Regulation 2D, which made it an offence to 'systematically to publish matter calculated to foment opposition to the prosecution of the war'. When Germany invaded Russia in June 1941, the British Communists became fervent supporters of the war and the ban was lifted.[17]
The German battleship Bismarck is sunk after hours of cannon duels and biplane torpedo attacks.
1 June 1941
Civilian clothing is rationed for the first time.[18]
18 December 1941
The National Service (No. 2) Act is passed. All men 18-60 and unmarried women and childless widows aged 20-30 are now liable to some form of national service, including military service for those under 51. The first military registration of 18.5-year-olds takes place. The Schedule of Reserved Occupations is abandoned: from now on only individual deferments from the draft will be accepted.
1942
23 January 1942
First US Army troops arrive in the UK. Disembarking at Belfast, the officers were the advanced party of a force intended to defend Northern Ireland and release British troops for service overseas.[19]
5 March 1942
The Daily Mirror publishes a controversial cartoon by Philip Zec which Churchill and other senior government figures alleged was damaging to public morale. Zec is investigated by MI5 and the government seriously proposes banning the newspaper until parliamentary opposition forces a retreat.
23 April 1942
Beginning of so-called Baedeker Blitz on English provincial towns, mainly chosen for their historic and cultural significance; Exeter, Bath, Canterbury, Lincoln and York along with several coastal towns were targeted. Attacks continue sporadically until 6 June.
1 July 1942
The basic civilian petrol ration was abolished, making fuel unavailable to private car owners.[20]
15 November 1942
Church bells were rung all over the United Kingdom for the first time since May 1940, in celebration of victory at the Second Battle of El Alamein.[21]
The Ministry of Labour reports that 1942 strikes cost 1,527,000 working days, as compared with 1,079,000 in 1941.[22]
1943
18 February 1943
The House of Commons votes, 335 to 119, against a Labour amendment demanding the creation of a Social Security Ministry and immediate implementation of the Beveridge report. The government has approved the plan "in principle" but called for a delay until the war is over.
19 February 1943:
The Labour Party National Executive Committee rejects the Communist Party's application for affiliation saying it must carry out decisions of the Comintern in Moscow, that it has shown "complete irresponsibility in British politics" and because "its general outlook is entirely out of harmony with the philosophy and objectives of the Labour Party."[23]
7 April 1943
The Government releases a White Paper by John Maynard Keynes, announcing its post-war currency stabilisation plan designed to provide an international banking system.
12 April 1943
The Chancellor of the Exchequer presents a budget of £5.8 billion with 56% to be raised from current revenue; the deficit would be £2.8 billion of which £2.2 will be borrowed at home.[24]
29 July 1943
Labour Minister Ernest Bevin announces that women from 19 to 50 will be called for work in plane and munitions plants. Men eligible for military service may choose work in coal mines.[25]
23 September 1943
The Ministry of Health reports that 1942 births totaled 654,039 versus 480,137 in 1941; deaths 66,811 versus 55,043. Infant mortality was 49 per 1,000, the lowest on record for Britain.[26]
14 December 1943
The first of 33 fortnightly ballot draws for the compulsory recruitment of men for coal mining, who would otherwise have been conscripted into the Armed Forces. These recruits would become known as "Bevin Boys".[27]
20 December 1943
Villages in the South Hams area of Devon were compulsorily evacuated to create a training area for the planned D-Day landings. Also evacuated were the villages of Imber in Wiltshire and Tyneham in Dorset. The inhabitants of the last two have never been allowed to return.
1944
21 January 1944
Start of Operation Steinbock or the "Baby Blitz", a Luftwaffe night bombing campaign against southern England, which continued until May 1944.
During Exercise Tiger an American training exercise for D-Day landings on Utah Beach in Slapton Sands, Devon, a German attack on 28 April kills 746 US Army and Navy servicemen.
The Labour Party members of the coalition government resign in order to prepare for the upcoming general election. Churchill appoints a largely Conservative caretaker government.
16 June 1945
The Family Allowances Act passed. Mothers will receive a tax-free cash payment for each child in their care. This is the first time in Britain that a state payment has gone directly to a wife rather than her husband.
General election voting takes place in the UK. The ballots are then sealed for three weeks to allow the collection and counting of overseas service votes.
^Fethney, Michael (1990), The Absurd and the Brave: C.O.R.B. - The True Account of the Government's World War II Evacuation of Children Overseas, Book Guild Publishing Ltd ISBN9780863324475 (p. 60)
^Edgar Jones, et al. "Civilian morale during the Second World War: Responses to air raids re-examined." Social History of Medicine 17.3 (2004): 463-479.
^Linsey Robb, "‘The Front Line’: Firefighting in British Culture, 1939–1945." Contemporary British History 29.2 (2015): 179-198.
^Facts on File, Facts on file yearbook 1943 (1944) p. 178
^Facts on File, Facts on file yearbook 1943 (1944) p. 59
^Facts on File, Facts on file yearbook 1943 (1944) p. 115
^Facts on File, Facts on file yearbook 1943 (1944) p. 243
^Facts on File, Facts on file yearbook 1943 (1944) p. 307
^Taylor, Warwick H. "Bevin Boys Association"(PDF). seniorsnetwork.co.uk/bevinboys/index.htm. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
^ abEssex-Lopresti, Tim; Woolven, Robin (2005). "A Brief History of Civil Defence"(PDF). www.civildefenceassociation.org.uk. Civil Defence Association. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
Further reading
Addison, Paul. "The Impact of the Second World War," in Paul Addison and Harriet Jones, eds. A Companion to Contemporary Britain: 1939-2000 (2005) pp 3–22.
Addison, Paul. The road to 1945: British politics and the Second World War (1975; 2nd ed. 2011).
Addison, Paul. Churchill on the Home Front, 1900-1955 (1992) ch 10–11.
Levine, Joshua. The Secret History of the Blitz (2015).
Marwick, Arthur. The Home Front: The British and the Second World War. (1976).
Reynolds, David J. " Britain, the Two World Wars, and the Problem of Narrative" Historical Journal, 60#1, 197-231. https://Doi.Org/10.1017/S0018246X16000509 A historiography
Short, Brian. The Battle of the Fields: Rural Community and Authority in Britain during the Second World War (2014).
Taylor, Matthew. "Sport and Civilian Morale in Second World War Britain." Journal of Contemporary History (2016): online
Todman, David. Britain's War: 1937-1941 (vol 1, Oxford UP, 2016); 828pp; comprehensive coverage of home front, military, and diplomatic developments; Excerpt