23 April 1942 A.D. Germans begin “Baedeker Raids” on England
23
April 1942 A.D. Germans
begin “Baedeker Raids” on England
Editors.
“Germans begin `Baedeker Raids’ on England.” History.com. 2009. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/germans-begin-baedeker-raids-on-england. Accessed 22
Apr 2015.
On this day in 1942, in retaliation for
the British raid on Lubeck, German bombers strike Exeter and later Bath,
Norwick, York, and other “medieval-city centres.” Almost 1,000 English
civilians are killed in the bombing attacks nicknamed “Baedeker Raids.”
On March 28 of the same year, 234
British bombers struck the German port of Lubeck, an industrial town of only
“moderate importance.” The attack was ordered (according to Sir Arthur Harris,
head of British Bomber Command) as more of a morale booster for British flyers
than anything else, but the destruction wreaked on Lubeck was significant: Two
thousand buildings were totaled, 312 German civilians were killed, and 15,000
Germans were left homeless.
As an act of reprisal, the Germans
attacked cathedral cities of great historical significance. The 15th-century
Guildhall, in York, as an example, was destroyed. The Germans called their air
attacks “Baedeker Raids,” named for the German publishing company famous for
guidebooks popular with tourists. The Luftwaffe vowed to bomb every building in
Britain that the Baedeker guide had awarded “three stars.”

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