“1939: A People's History" by Frederick Taylor is an interesting account of the events leading up to the start of the Second World War as experienced by ordinary people; men, women and children, in England and Germany. Although not a book of action with a Blitzkrieg of tanks and aircraft crashing through allied defences, its a great account of the experiences of the men and women in both countries trapped in this cascading chain of events that finally led to the outbreak of WW2. The author utilises original British and German sources, including recorded interviews, along with numerous diaries, memoirs and newspapers to bring this story to life.
I found in an engaging read and full of interesting information, some of which I may have failed to register in my previous reading on this period. For instance:
"At 2 p.m. on Sunday 2 October, Poland's semi-dictatorial government sent troops to occupy the hitherto Czech-governed industrial district of the former duchy of Teschen ( Těšín). The region, with a population of about 200,000, which had been in dispute between the two countries since 1919, was declared annex to Poland. The country's nationalist press went wild. Showing rather more prescience, one of the Czech officers in charge of the surrender remarked bitterly to his Polish counterparts that they would be handing over the area to Germany before they knew it."
The author also provided details of the IRA bombing campaign that was taking place during the months leading up to WW2 including the bomb that went off in Coventry on Friday the 25th August 1939. Five people died and 70 were injured when that IRA bomb exploded in the Coventry city centre. The author mentions covert links between extreme republicans and German military intelligence leading up to the start of the war; the enemy of my enemy is my friend!
Another interesting bit of information from the book covers the concerns of the civilian population in England about the plight of their pets in case of aerial bombing or a gas attack by the Germans:
"There had, in fact, been a spate of anxious pet lovers taking their animal companions to vets to be euthanized during the Munich Crisis, perhaps amounting to several thousand in all. The National Canine Defence League had been forced to refuse a wave of requests for help with 'putting to sleep' pet dogs, advising owners to await the outcome of the Hitler/Chamberlain talks before taking such drastic decisions. It was an experience which meant, a year later, that the NCDL (and its equivalent for cats, the CPL) had built lists of potential homes for city pets threatened by possible enemy action. Perhaps it saved some." However once war was declared against Germany in 1939 it led to what was later called 'the great cat and dog massacre'. In the first week of the war in September 1939, at least 400,000 cats and dogs in London were destroyed.
Overall I really enjoyed this book and I would recommend it as a good start to read about the events leading up to the start of the Second World War and how ordinary civilians on both sides of the Channel experienced those events.