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2007-12-05 02:09:47 · 2 answers · asked by jama 1 in Arts & Humanities History

2 answers

Lots of destruction.

Many of the children were sent away into the country or to other countries.

It galvanized the British people. They had something physical to be at war with and a good reason to want to beat their enemies.

It cost the Germans a lot. They lost a lot of pilots and resources in an attempt to break the British, and they ultimately failed.

The British people gained a lot of confidence. They knew if they could survive the Blitz, they could win in the end. Also, some of the German targets of large importance never were destroyed, showing the strength of British culture.

2007-12-05 02:11:48 · answer #1 · answered by Yun 7 · 0 0

In the summer of 1940, Hitler decided to invade Britain. His plan was to take control of the English Channel by destroying the Royal Airforce and then to send German troops into Britain to take control.

In July 1940, Hitler put his plan into operation. The German airforce (Luftwaffe) began making daily bombing raids on British ships, ports, radar stations, airfields and aircraft factories. This became known as the Battle of Britain.

2007-12-05 02:13:57 · answer #2 · answered by Sunny 4 · 0 0

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