Yes; many British children were evacuated by ships to Canada, which was considered far enough away from the range of German aircraft bombers to be safe. A ship containing a lot of children was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine, but, a lot of children would have died in the air raids on England, if they had not been sent to Canada.
they gave demm to fisha swamp.
i think the 31st of august
for british evacuation of military forts around the great lakes
Evacuation in Britain during World War 2 took place primarily in September 1939, just after the war started. This involved the evacuation of children, pregnant women, and disabled individuals from cities to rural areas to keep them safe from bombing raids.
On September 1, 1939 the Ministry of Health launched Operation Pied Piper. It was prior to the Battle of Britain. A link has been added for you to read more about the evacuation.
This question is confusing because it was the Ministry of Health that put the evacuations in place. They liked protecting the children and some adults by sending them to the countryside or smaller towns. They did have problems with the evacuation but overall it went as well as things could go with millions involved in the evacuation.
No, it was most commonly just referred to as the Evacuation, but also Operation Pied Piper. The Blitz referred solely to the sustained Bombing of British cities during the Battle of Britain.
The Evacuation of British & subsequently French & Belgian soldiers from the beaches at Dunkirk in June 1940. 338 000 were returned to Britain.
what is staged evacuation
Between 27 May and 4 June 1940, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was forced to retreat to Dunkirk by German forces. The Dunkirk evacuation, code-named Operation Dynamo, was the evacuation back to Britain from the beaches and harbour of Dunkirk, France,
The government started evacuation.
In the evacuation diary we need to write that:What happened in evacuation?How do you feel?What did you see?